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Sentinel

Snow stonn strands 1,000 travelers
By Associated Press
An mtense Pacific storm pushed
40 mph winds and ankle-deep snow
mto the Northwest today, while
more than l,(lll travelers were
trapped m one Colorado city and
rescuers followed twme tied tree-totree to rescue three people from an
Idaho mountain shack.
Storm and gale warnings and
travelers' advisories were posted In
several areas of the Northwest early
today, and as much as 12 lnches of
snow was expected In Oregon's
Cascades and Slsklyoli mountains
overnight, the National Weather
SeiVIce said.
Meanwhile, warm air a head of a
.cold front stretchlng from Wisconsin to Texas prompted tornado
watches early today for parts of
Louisiana and Mississippi. Record
rainfall was reported in Little Rock.
Ark., while three Michigan cities
reported record high temperatures .
Interstate 70 was closed for
several hours Monday ·night from
Denver Into Kansas as visibility was
limited by snow whipped by gusting
winds.

Uptoafootofsmwdroppedln the
Colorado mount;~.lns, 8 inches fell m
southern Colorado and 2 to 4 Inches
hlt cities a I o n g t h e F r o n t
Range.Highways over most Colorado mountam passes were slick
Monday night, and tire chams ur
soowllres were required on several
passes.
The Pacific storm prompted gale
warnings for parts of Washlngton,
Oregon and the Northern California
coast. And winter storm watches
were .In effect for eastern Washlngton and Oregon, where freezing ram
a nd snow was foreca~t.
. Western Kansas received about
a n lnchofsnow Monday, and winds
up to 25 mph limited visibility, said
Roy Feriburger at the weather
service In Goodland, Kan. Snow
stopped falling about midnight, he
said.
A Kansas Highway Patrol statement said authorities closed I-70 in
western kansas for several hours to
accommodate Colorado officials,
who asked them to limit travel.
About 90 miles over the border m
Limon, Colo., winds gusting upto40

mph whipped smw atready on the
ground, strandlng1,iOOtravelers for
several hours Monday. A string of
cars five miles long trudged mto
Limon behind snow plows Monday
afternoon to walt tor the winds to die
down.
·
1-'1!1 and other Umon highways
were reopened late Monday night,
and outbound traffic was heavy.
said Pollee Chief Jim Trahern.
The city opened its shelter In Qty
Hall, taking 1n about 200 people,
many of whom left late' Monday
night. Trahern estimated about 700
people checked into motel rooms,
and another 200 waited out the storm
In truck stops and cates .
In Burley, Idaho, . volunteers
rescued three people who were
stranded for two nights m a shack
atter going up 9,26.'5-:foot Mt.
Hamson to recover a broken-down
snowmobile.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions--Betty Hupp, Mason: Chlorus Grim,m, Racine;
Nadine Futch, Pomeroy; Orpha
James, Pomeroy.
Discharges---Zelda Davis.

Smith's inauguration Thursday
RIO GRANDE - The sixteenth Procession for the ceremony will
president of Rio Grande College and assemble In Anniversary Hall at
Community College, Dr. Clodus R. 10:30a.m.
Smith , will be inaugurated ThursFollowing the ceremony, Dr.
day in an 11 a.m. ceremony Smith will be honored at an
scheduled for t he Fine and Periorm- Inaugural Luncheon at 12:30 p.m.
ing Arts Theatre.
·and an Inaugura1Ballat8p.m. Both
The ceremony will be the climax the lunche.:&gt;n and ball are scheduled
of a two-day calendar of festivities for the James A. Rhodes Student
surrounding the ina ugura tion.
and Community Center.
Trudy Hoyt will start the ca lendar
Dr. Smith came to Rio Grande in
of evenis with a piano recital in the October 1983, after serving nearly
Fine a nd Performing A11s Theatre ten years as VIce-President for
at 8 p.m ., Wednesday. A reception University Relations at Cleveland
will follow the recital in the F1ne and State University.
Performing Arts Theatre Atrium .
Dr. Smith earned an Associate
Registration for the inauguration degree In 1948 from Cameron State
will begin at 8 a.m. Thursday. The College; a B.S. degree in 1950 from

Happenings around_Meigs County...
Emergency squads
answer seven calls
Seven calls were answered Mon-

day by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical SeJV!ce.
At 6:48 a.m .. Pomeroy went to
Ba ii&lt;•y Run Rd . for Charles Nease,
Sr.. to Holzer Medical Center. At
9:43a.m .. Rutland went to Harrison·
;ille for Nadine Futch to Ve terans
Memorial. At 12: 03 p.m .. Sa lem
Township sta Iion six was called a
brus h fire on Buck Run Rd. Al 1: 25
p.m .. the Racine unit trea ted Tony
Imboden a t the Racine s ta tion but
did not tra nspor1.Middleport station
ten was ca lled to the sceneofabrush
fire at Little Kyger at l : 40 p.m. At
1: !i7 p.m .. the Vinton County Fire
Dept. was ca lled to assist. And at
5:31 p. m .. Pomeroy responded to a
ca ll a t 224 Union Ave. for Ortla

to

"

Orders judgment
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight has ordere!l a
judgment in the amount of $3;336.30
plus interest and costs be paid by,
Sherman Marcum, Vinton , to Botkins Grain and Feed Co .• Botkins,
Ohio. Judgment stems from default
on a promissory note.

841 kills recorded
A tota lof841 deer were checked in
at stations throughoutMe igsCountiY
on Monday, the first day of the gun
hunting season, Meigs Game Protector Keith Woods reports. Last
year's first day report was 588.

Seeks divorce

James to Veterans MPmor ia l.

Funds received
Me igs County received $9,125.58
as its share of $5,788,262.52 distributed to Ohio counties, cities,
townships and villages In the final
distribution of 1979 slate motor
vehicle registt·afion fees, Sta te
Aud itor Thomas E . Ferguson
repo11s .

A suit for divorce has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Gwen S. Laudetmllt. Hemlock
Grove, a~alnst Franklin Lavder milt, Pomeroy. on grounds of gross
neglect of duty andextremecruelty.

Guilty plea given
on complicity count
Joseph King, 18, Route 681,
Alhany. entered a plea of guilty to a
charge of complicity to commit a
breaking and entering Monday
before Judge qarles H. Knight in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court .
Complicity to commit a breaking
a nd entering is a felony in the fourth
degree, Paul Gerard, special inves·
tigator for the county prosecutor's
office reports. and carries a possible
penalty of six, 12 or 18 months in jail
and a fine of up to $2500.
The charge was filed In a bill of
Information prepared by the office
of Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow lll.lt alleged that
King aided and abetted another
man, Rick Reeves. In committing a
breaking and entering of Marshall
Slater's gru·age in Snowville earlier
this month.
Sentencing was withheld pending
the completion of a pre-sentence
investigation and report.and was set
for 10 a.m. on Jan. 7. King was
released on his own recognizance.

ATTEND FREE SEMINAR!

Weather forecast
Tonight, showers a nd possible
thunderstorms. Low 40-45. Wednesday. showers likely a nd much
cooler. High 45-50. The chance of
ra in is near 100 percent tonight and
70 percent Wednesday.
Extended Forecast
ThUJ'Sday through Saturday:
Fair on ThUJ'Sday and Frt,day.
(.'hance of showers or snow Hurries
on Saturday. Highs m the 40s
Thursday and Saturday and 45-55
Friday. Lows generally In the 30s.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1984
7:30 P.M.
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO

story, photo on Paae 3

•

Vol.34, No.1 SO

BROOMJNG rr - Karla Benback llle8 a broom to
sweep snow trom her car Monday momlng In Crested
Butte, Colo. Some Colorado mou.aln areas reported

niore than a foot of snow as a winter stonn passed
through the Rockies. (AP Laserphoto ).

Area deaths
Robert A. Thompson, 78, Hinton,
W.Va., died Sunday morning at his
residence. followmg a brief Illness.
Born Feb.19, 1906in Indianapolis,
he was the son of Frank Hambleton
and Bertha Cook Thompson.
Thompson retired in 1971 from the
Dravo Construction Company as
operations manager of the Eastern
Construction Division, Pittsburgh.
He was a member of the Hinton
First united Methodist Church; the
Masonic Lodge of Terre Haute; the
Ben! Kedem Shrine, Charleston;
Greenbrier Valley Shrine Club;
Hinton Kiwanis Club; Hinton Elks" ·
Lodge; the Dravo Veterans' Association. Pittsburgh; and the Hinton
Sanitary Board.
Survivors mclude his wife, Irma
Hood Thompson, at home In Hinton,
formerly of Pomeroy; a daughter,
Mrs. William (~oberta) Sorg,
Thousand Oaks, Calif.; and two
grandsons, Robert Mark and Wllliam Rhett Sorg, both of Thousa nd
Oaks.
death
Mr. Thompson
by a brother,
was preceded
Hillis B.
In
Thompson; a son, · Frank H.
Thompson; and a daughter, Irma
Frances Thompson.

Servlc;es will be held Wednesday
morning at 11 a.m. at the Ronald
Meadows Funeral Parlor. Hmton.
Rev. John Smith and Dr. Richard
Crickard will both olflclate.
Members of the Hmton Masonic
Lodge will serve as pallbearers In
Hinton.
Burial will be in Beech Grovp
Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Calling hOurs wUI be from 5 to 9
Tuesday at the funeral home.

ECONOMICAL
WINTER
TIRES

RETREADS
GENERAL
TIRE SALES
"Where. the Rubber
Meet.&lt; th&lt;· Rnad.'.
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Doll the qutstion of knowing the ."proper" !hing
to say ot tht visitation kttp you from gotng to the VIIi to·
lion or funeral? It shouldn't.
YolK apptaronct at a wisitatlon or funeral is always
a support and oxprlllion of loYO to the bereaved. Tht
words you expro11 os you tmbraco or extend tht clasp·
of·hand con add o sincort fHiing of warmth and concern
- but the wards aren't otarly as important as your
"just being thtrt."
.
.
Here are 1ctmt 11prt1s1ons you fft!aht .cons!*~;
"John was such a lint
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"My warmost sympathy to y~u an4 tho family."
Mary was such a dear frilnol.
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Mary enjoytclllfo and ...,... hor joys 10 often woth

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others."

Or just a simple, "I'm 10rry", is oppropriato.
You may find it oasltr Ia lOY~ wards
fort If you practico lholll btftr...iod whon you aro alont.
s-tiNt just hoaring yowlllf oay tht wOrds out laud
makts tho01 easior to upnn to othtrl.
Wo wok- your quoatloM aM com"*''' - pri·
watoly or publicly through this column.

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MIDDL[PORT, DHID

JAMES SIMPSON

Blil BLOWER

CHESHIRE- TheGallla County
Commission agreed In principle
Tuesday to extend a line of credit to
Guiding Hand School and Gallco
Sheltered Workshop to cover the
facility's operations until it receives
money from the 1985Jax collection.
Superintendent John Riffe told
commissioners he expected the
· school's expenses to run approxl·
mately $125,t)X) above Its income
througll.lhe next four months. ,
The 169 Board of Menial Retardation and Developmental Disabilities
a resolution Nov. 20 asking
the commission to either loan the
board the money outright or
authorize the board to obtain a line of
credit or loan from a bank.
Commissioner Verlm Swam said
the board should not loan ihe school
money because, "wecan't!Jecornea
banker for the · county." However,
Swain said he did not disapprove of
the commission allowing the board
to borrow the money from a bank.
"There is no question they have the
payback ability," he said, m
reference to the additional one mill
levy passed by Gallla County's'
voters Nov. 6.
Ttte proposed line of credit ,
Commission President Paul Niday
said, "wouldn't bother me as long as
It doesn't exceed expected Income."
The school has built Into.Its 1985
budget some ·onetime major expenses, but Riffe said If It appears
the school will not have enough
money to pay for them. they will be
"Afler we get over thls hump,"

DEC.
DEC.
.DEC.
DEC.

8th-BULOVA WALL CLOCK
15th-PULSAR LADIES WATCH
22nd-DIAMOND EARRINGS
24TH-S50ooo.DIAMOND . RING

employees and they wanted a promise that no GDC
employees would be laid off.
Another GDC employee, Tanya Sturgeon, said
stmllar petitions would be circulated among
doWntown merchants, area clergy and the .Galllpolis
. City CDmlllisslon for Its endorsement.
GDC Supermtendent Jeffrey Spelss said while the
faclllty was looking to transfer the residents over a
per1odoftlme, themov~werebeingmadeinthelrbest
Interests and there would be no layoffs in the forseeable
future .
'
·
He said the move by District 1199, "in particular
Katlna Cummings," the district's organizer at GDC,
"was spreadmg fear among the Inmates."
An election.to determine which union will reptesent

Riffe told the commission, "the
school will be self·sustabtbtg. We
will make sure "when the money
comes In we wlll be .within our
budget and we will operate It
accordingly."
Whlle the tmmedla te future looks
rosy, Riffe said state and federal
grants that ha veprovlded 75 percent
of the school's funding for the past
several years rmtY be reduced .
"Our federal Title 20 funds,"
Guldmg Hand Prtnclpal Dave
Ratllft said, "for the next two years
have been cut 15 percent. Unfortumitely, somestateNndlngmay also
be redll(:ed proportionally."
In other action, commissioners
agreed to advertise for bids a new
ambulance tor the Gallla County
·Emergency Medical Service to
replace a vehlcle destroyed by fire
Monday.
EMS Director James Evans and
the commissioners agreed to call In
the state fire marshal to mvestlgate
the cause of the blaze.
'
The vehicle's drtver. Robert C.
Bailey, said he was not completely
satisfied the origin of the fire was m
the vehicle's electrical system, as
determined by Gaillpolis Fire
DepartrT)ent officials.
Not only do the commissioners
need to determine the source of the
blaze, but Swain said the Insurance
company may alsO request a report.
Bailey said the $22,000 vehicle's
electrtcal system had been rebuilt
by its manufacturer, The Horton
Company of Columbus, atter a
small electiical fire Oct. '!1.

Coleman, companion indicted

.

25 Cents

•

GDC employees wUI be conducted next year and
Spelss said District 1199 is "doing whatever it can to
win the election. No other union is uslng these tactics.
Whichever union wins the election Is r.ot my business.
Why don't they leave the residents alone?"
Cummings told commissioners some of those
scheduled for release "are scheduied to go downtown
and some to oiher communities , as well as other
facili ties." ·
The moves were being made, Cummings said , "with
. no justification. Thereisanumbersgamebelngplayed
from Columbus; that so many residents will be moved
out." She said the employees want to see a plan for the
transfers.
.
Speiss said hJ "would not professionally stand for "

res idents being released into Ihe community . He said
the moves wou ld be madE' only i! a place can be found
tha t will take better care of the residents. "We are
making good placement s." S(l('iss said. "The
department monitors their progress. If it isn'twor king
out , then we bring them l&gt;ack ."
Residents who are "high -functioning" will not be
moved against their will. Speiss added . He said only
"low -functioning" clien ts would be placed agai ns t
their will .
· CDC has stopped hiring "so on one's job would be in
danger," Speiss continued. He sa id he hopro to reduce
I he facility's staff through att rition. not layoffs. " I don 't
see any layoffs in the next few months. " he said . "But
the final decision is not made by me but by higher ups."

Tax plan
at-a-glance

'

dropped.

992-3671

2 Sections. 14 Pages

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Commissioners
.
extend credit line
to Guidi~g Hand

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Brilliant color performance leaturing the convenience ol single-knob electronic tuning.

en tine

Moratorium effort gets commission support

.

Ohio lo~tery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number 'drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 567. · ·
In the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 6198.
The lottery reported a loss of
$52,900 from wagering on "The
Number."
The loss resulted from sales of
$1,156,684.50. while holders of win ning tickets are entitled to share
$1,209,664.50.

stories, Photos on Page 14

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 28, 1984

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
OVP Staff Writer
GALLIPOLIS-TWo members of theGallliCounty
Commission agreed Tuesday to send letters of support
tor a move by repreSentatives of Ohio Health Care
Employees Union Dlsirtct 1199 to obtam amoratoripm
on the transfer of approximately ~to 90 residents of
the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
·
A GDC employee, Mike Bush, presented Commissioners Paul Niday and Verlln Swain with a petition
contabling 200 names asking for the moratorium. Bush
said the moratorium could be lifted II three conditions
were met by the GDC administration. . . .
Bush said GDC employees wanted assurances the
residents would be transferred to a better environment. t~lr progress could be followed-up by GDC

Geraldine Fergerson
Mrs. Geraldine Fergerson, Columbus,d.a ughterofBerthaParker,
Laurel CUff, and the late Pearl
Parker, died Saturday evening In a
Columbus rest home.
Funeral seJVices for Mrs. FergersonwillbeheldWednesdaymorning
in Columbus.
Burial will be in the Rock Springs
Cemetery . Graveside services will
be held at 1 p.m. wtth Rev. Robert
Miller offisciatlng. Fu
H
Jerry pears
nera1 orne,
Columbus, Is in charge of

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Robert A. Thompson

Oklahoma A and M College; and a
Masters of Science degree from
Oklahoma State University In 1955.
Dr. Smith received his doctorate
from Cornell University in 1960.
He served as a faculty member
and administrator at the University
of Maryland from 1959 to 1973,
before moving to Cleveland State.
He is niarrted to the former
Pauline R. Chaat, a fanner teacher .
She had been employed as the
project nianager for the Cleveland
Board of Education's Cleveland
Indian Education, Title IV -A program . They have three children:
Martha, 32; William Paul, 30; and
Paula Diane, 28.

Antique shop opens

Opposes village tax

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)-- A Lucas
County Grand Jury today mdicted
fanner fugitives Alton Coleman and
Debra Brown on aggravated
murder charges in the deaths of a
Toledo woman and her lQ.year-old
daughter. ·
Coleman and Ms. Brown face five
counts each stemming from the July
7 slaylngs of Virginia Temple, 30,
and her daughter, Rachelle; Lucas
County Prosecutor Anthony Pizza
has said he wHI seek the death
penalty aga!Jist Coleman and Ms.

Bro\vn.

~

Assistant Lucas County prosecutor Curtis Posner said Coleman and
Brown each have been charged wit~
one count of aggravated burglary.
two counts of aggravated murder

TNDTVIDUAL BRACKETS:
The current l51o 16 tax brackPts , .
ra nging from 11 percent to 50
percent. would be trimmed to 15
percent, 25 percent. 35 percent .
For singles , the first $2,800 of
taxab le income ·would be tax
free . Between $2.800·$19 .300
would be taxed at 15 perce nt:
S19,ID$38.100. 25 percent; over
$38,100. 35 percent.
For couples filing jOimly, the
first $3,800 of taxable income
would be tax free. Between
$3,800-S31,800. 15 pPr ce nt ;
$31,800-$63,800. 25 percent ; over
$63.800, 35 percent .
CORPORATE RATES: A flat
33 percent would replace the
graduat ed system tha t now gD&lt;'s
up to ~li percent.
PERSONAL EJo..TMfYfi01\'S:

CHRISTMAS KETl'LE - Major Glenna Rum(Ret.) left, and Mrs. Edith Spencer are at the
tnulltlonal Salvation Anny Christmas Kettle at the
Pomeroy Kroger Store. Funds collected wiD he used
to provide Christmas holiday ~n food and toys for

mel,

the underprivileged. The kettle will be at the location
every day but on Wednesdays. Allhough recuperallng
fl·om an illness, Majar Rummel was 61llng m at the
kettle Tuesday afternoon for Mrs. Dora Wining who Is
In charge of the activity.

Regan's tax proposal needs
acceptance ·from President
WASH1NGTON ( AP)- Although
he ordered the Treasury Department to find a better way to tax
Americans. President Reagan is
keeping mum about whether he'll
support the newly released plan.
And without that strong backing,
congressional leade rs say any such
overhaul of the tax code Is doomed .
"If this is just Don Regan's tax
plan, It Is the biggest trial balloon
smce the Hindenburg," said Rep.
James R. Jones, D Okla., referring
to the German airship that crashed
m flames in New Jersey In 1937.

during the commission of a !Jur·
glary, and two counts of aggravated
murder during a rape or attempted
rape.
The bodies of Mrs. Temple and
her daughter were found In the
crawlspace of their home July 7.
They had been strangled.
Coleman and Ms. Brown were
"What we must have is Ronald
sought m half a dozen Midwest · Reagan's tax plan," Jones said
states thls summer on charges
shortly atter Regan, the treasury
secretary, unveiled on Tuesday the
ranging from rape to murder.
Coleman was placed on the Flli'slO
long·awalted proposal that cuts tax
Most Wanted list before he and Ms.
rates while doing away with. a
Brown were arrested In an Eviln·
vartety of deductions and other tax
ston, Ill., park July 20.
breaks.
Said Sen. Bill Bradley, D N.J.,
Coleman and Ms. Brown pleaded
guUty Monday In U.S. District Comi
co-author of a tax simplification
plan. "The question Is really gomg to
In J;&gt;ayton to the July 16 kidnapping
of a Kentucky college professor.
be whether the president will be

willing to take on the special
interests and propose a (tax refonn I
bill."
Rep. Dan Rostenkowskl, D Ill.,
whose House Ways and Means
Committee must originate a ny tax
legislation, agreed the White House
must use Its political mu scle to get it
through Congress.
"Without quick and vocal support
from the White House. the pla n will
lose its momentum ." he sa id .
But Reaga n withhe ld h is
approval.
·
"All of us will need time to study
the entire document ." he said in a
written statement. "We a re will.ing
to listen to the comments and
suggestions of all Americans, and
especially those from the Congress ,
Its leaders and members of the
tax-writing comml ttees. "
Indeed, Regan, who spelled out
his proposa l in a series of appearances around Washington. said the
pla n •·was written on a word
processor . It ca n be changed ."

Specia l interest groups. tmm('
diately opening fire . hope it will be.
Lane Kirkland, president of the
AFL-C!O. charged the proposal Is
"unfair to working people and their
families." And David Richards.
who heads the National Association
of Rea ltors. argued the pla n Is
"a nti -savings . anti-investment and
ant i-homeownership.''
The study dates back to January
when Reagan in his State of the
Union address directed the depart··
ment to come up with a simpler and
fairer tax system .
The result: a "modified fiat " tax
plan that would lower tax ra tes
while scrapping a wide-range of
popular deductions and tax breaks.
"We have sought toseetolt that all
families with a given income s hould
pa y approximately the . same
amount of tax ," Regan told
reporters.
The Trea sury estimaled that 78
pe rcent of Ame rican taxpayers
would pay less orthesameu nderthe
plan. The rest would pay more.

Would double to $2.000 from the
c urrent $1.000.
ZERO TAX BRA CKET
AMOUNT: Would climb from
thP curr&lt;'nt $2 ..100 for 'Ingles to
$2,800; from $3,400 for joint filers
to $3,800: a nd from $2,300 for
head s of households to $:J.'i1Xl.
INDIVID UAL RETIRE ·
MENT ACCOUNTS: The maximum cont ribution to a taxdPferred IRA. now $"2.000 for a
worker and $250 for an unemployed spouse would be raised to
$2,500 each . A couple could put
aside up to $5.00J a year in a n
IRA
HOME MORTGAGE !1\TER ·
EST: Curr&lt;'nt deduction would
be reta ined .
OTHER 11\TEREST PAY MENTS: Would limit to $5.001
the wrlteoff for other kinds of
interes t.
MARRIAGE PENALTY DEDUCTI0:-1 : Would ill' repea led.
Curremly, thC' law allows a
dC'duction of up 10 $3.[DJ for
two·earner cou ples.

Uti:EMPLOYME NT CO M·
PENS.~ TJON: Would becom e
fully ta xable.
CHARITABLE CONmiBU·
TlONS: Would be rC'tained for
only the amount that exCE'eds 2
percent of adj ustC'd gross
income.
HEAL TH INSURA NCE :
Employer-financed prrmiums
exceeding Sl75 a month for a
familv plan wou ld ill' taxC'd. S70 a
month for singles. Ot her worker
hinge b!'nefi ts. includin g group
term life in surance and C'du ra tion a id . would ill' tax&lt;'Cl as
wag(;'s.
STATEMDLOCALTAXES:
Ded uction would be rep&lt;&gt;alro .

High deficits continue; prime rate cut
Under the tax plan announced
NEW YORK (AP)- Right atter
Tuesday,
which would finance new
the Treasury Department recommended a sweepmg overhaul of the rate reductions by eliminating
Income lax that wouldn't Increase many JqJUiar deductions, 78 per- ·
tax revenues, It reported the cent of taxpayers would pay less or
government started Its ~ fiscal tbeir taxes would remam the same
ye!D' by outspendmg Its mcome by under the pian.
Of the • remaining 22 percent.
$28.79 bllllon In October.
"more
than halt wW experience a
Administration budget el'(JE'rts
,
tax
Increase
ot Jess than 1 percoot of
told President Reagan earlier thls
Income,''
according
to a Treasury
month that the deficit for all of the
statement.
·
new fiscal year seems headed tor
Chase
Manhattan
Bank,
Jnel!ll·
J"lll1&amp;'l! of f,ffi billion to $210 bllllon.
weD a~ therecord$195.4 btlllonof while, undercut cunpetltors by
lOwering Its pr1me lending rate to
· tlscal1!183.
11.25 pe~cent, reducing the key .
The deficit tor fiscal 1984, which buslness·borrowing charge to Its
lowest level since March.
ended sept. :.~. was $175.3 bllllon.

a

'"')

And U.S. car sales, sluggish for
two months because of strikes
againSt Industry leader General
Motors Corp., recovered zest In
mid-November with a 28.8 percent
gain over the comparable period a
year ago, the manufacturers
reported.
President Reagan said the tax
p~l meets his· demand for
simplification without being "a tax
Increase ln .dlsgutse." He promised
to carefully review the thick report
and public reaction to It before
sending hls version to Congress
early next year.
The proposal was unveiled at a

news conference by Treasury
Secretary Donald T. Regan.
"This will go a long way to assure
any American that the other person
is being taxed on the same basis as
he or she is," Regan said.
The plan would double the $1,000
personal exemptions; increase the
standard deductions; slash the
maximum individual tax rate (now
50 percent) to 35 percent; limit to
$5,000 the writeoff for mterest other
than on a home mortgage; and wipe
out the deduction now pennltted for
state and local income taxes.
The latest ptime rate cut , which
was followed by only a few regional

banks, left the banking Industry
widely split onwhere the prime rate
should be, while analysts were
predicting even more cuts In t he
weeks ahead.
Chase. the nation's thi rd -largest
bank, reduced its prime rate from
the11.75percent It had adopted Nov.
7, bypassing the 11.5perrent rate set
Monday by No. 2Cltlbankaswellas
Fl.-.t National Bank of Chicago and
Mellon Bank.
• Most of the other large banks,
includmg No. 1 Bank of America ,
remain at ll.75percent, whlle Wells
Fargo Bank has kept Its prime rate
at Ihe 12 percent level it set Oct. 26.

PRIME RATE - Two m~or
hanks, Clllbank and J"'rst National Bank of ChicB81J, have
reduced . their prime lending
rates by one-quarter percentage
point, lowering the key hll'llnet!8borrowlng charge to I U percent, a level which last prevailed
In early i\prll. ( AP Laserpboto).

�Wednesday, November 28, 1984

Commenta
The Daily Sentinel

· Pag&amp;-2-Th&amp; Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-· Middleport. Ollio
Wednesda • November 28. 1984

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
1'1~

i!l!m~
~v

.......... ..,.--.-.~=·~=~

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol The ASSO&lt;Iated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are wek1une. The)' !'Jhould be less than 300 word'!
All letters are s ubj ect toe4:11tlng and must be s lped wtth name, addres~; and
teh,ophone nurnbt"r . Nu unMigned letters wUI be publl"ihed. Lt!U~rs should be In
Jon~ .

ltood t~LSte, addrcssin&amp;" issues, nol pei"SOnaiiUes.

.

·Change can lead
:to success
·

Brand new hig h-tech companies that soar lnto. the space age from
ground zero in the manner of Apple Com puter, Digital Equipment and
Prime Computer might get the attention, but they're not gettmg a ll the
sa les.
. Simultaneous wit.h the emergence of such companies has come a
: less-publicized but equally profound development, the metamorphosis of
: relatively ancient enterprises into modern companies that leave tittle trace
· or their past.
: Some of the changes have been sweeping: Gould Inc . from Industrial
· products to electronics, American Can from packaging to financial
services, Penn Central Corp. from railroading to electronics and
telecommunications, The SingPr Company from sewing machines to
aerospace electronics.
.
_ For all thos&lt;' companies, moreover, there are dozens of others that have
: evolved into different entit ies more suitable, their officers thought, to the
-changing times.
·
• W.R. Grace, for example, flipped to chemicals and retailing from
·shipping. while Allied Corp. dropped "Chemical" from its name and added
. aerospace, oil a nd gas, a nd automotive ventures.
·
In many insta nces the original prod ucts continue as parts of a larger
· s ta ble and in som e the newer products represent natural progression in
· the sa~e market area . But changes at Gould , American Can, Singer and
. Penn Central arc almost total.
· As recmtly as the late 1970s Gould was a diversified industrial products
company, perhaps best known for batteries. Today it is almost totally
. e lectronics.
. ·
·
The new Gould concentrates on minicomputers, factory automation
: ·equipment , test and m easurement instruments, medical devices, defense
: · systems and electronic components, including semiconductors, for the
: e lec tronics indus try.
• The largest activity of The Singer Company, once a class smokestack
: operation , is now in aerospace electronics, which company olllclalsexpect
. · will be responsible for 50 percent of total sales rn 1!*W.
· : . Singer's change was as calcu la ted as was Gould's, the result not only of
~ia l and economic factors that led to a decline of home sewing in the
United Sta tes a nd Europe, but because of lntense foreign competition.
In r~sponse, the company decided to make aerospace electronics the
foca l point of it s growth plans. Among current products are au~raft
simulators. aircraft and spacecraft navigations systems, and mtsslle
guidance products.
.
.
You'd hardly recognize American Can anymore. In JUSt two years tt
inevestcd more than$750 million to build an insurance business and expand
into mutual fund management , investment counseUng and brokerage
services.
After 123 years with roots in the ra ilroad business. Penn Central filed for
bankruptcy in 1970. It emerged a different being in a different world. Today
it supplies products and services for energy, natural resource , electrontcs,
defense and telecommunications industries. and develops real estate and
coal properties.

a

Electing leaders
The 53 Republicans who will control the Senate in the 99th Congress are
meeting Wednesday to elect their leaders in a secrel ballot that could also
a ffect the 1988 presidential race and the complexion of key &amp;;nate
committees.
The GOP senators and senators-elect will choose a successor to Majority
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee. who decided the job was not the
best platform from which to mount the presidential campaign he is
expec ted to wage.
lronico lly, one of the candidates to succeed Baker in the leadership is
Sen . Robert Dole of Kansas, the chai1man of the Finance Committee, who
also has his eye on a possible White House run in 1~.
Others In the running for majority leader are Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska,
assistant GOP leader for the last eight years; Sen. James McClure of
Idaho, chairman of the. E nergy a nd Natural Resources Committee; Sen.
Richard Lugar of Indiana. outgoing chairman of the National Republican
Senatorial Committee and Seri. Pete V. Domenici of New Mexico,
chairman of the Budge t Committee.
The election of any of them exc('pt Stevens would affect committee
chairmanships. St('vens makes this point in a rguing that he should be
elevated to leader on the basi s of his experience and the others should
continue with their committee responsibilities .
Lugar is not chairman of a regular Senate committee, but will be if he is
· not elected leader. He is in Une to move up to the chairmanship of the
Foreign Relations Committee, replacing defeated Sen. Charles H. Percy of
lllinois. unless Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina exercises his option to
·take the job. In that case, Lugar would replace Helms as chairman of the
Agriculture Committee.
·H('lms said during his re-election campaign that he would stay with the
agricult.ure post because of Its Importa nce to tobacco growers and other
North Carolina farmers ..Some fellow conservatives have said he should
reconsider 1n· order to wield more inOuence on foreign policy.
Here are some of the. possible outcomes:
-Lugar is elected ma.lorlty leader, putting liberal Sen. Charles McC.
Mathias of Maryland next In line behind Helms In seniority on the Foreign
Relations Committee. Helms blocks Mathias' ascension by taking the
Foreign Relations post himself, leaving Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi,
a fellow Southerner, as chairman of Agriculture. Cochran creates a
tobacco subcommittee, with Helms as chalnnan.
-Dole is electl'(l majority leader. This makes Sen. Bob Pacl!wood of
Oregon, who has at times been at odds with the administration, the new
chalnnan of the Flnance Committee, which w1ll be In the thick of an
"'xpected fight over what to do about the tax laws.
As the election approached, most observers said no senator appeared to
have a majority on the first ballot. The candi~te finishing last In each
ballot wlll drop out until somebody gets. the ~ry 'II votes.

Her name In the registry of. the
American Kennel Club Is Prime
Time Susie Too bui to us she Is just
Susie who is starting her fourth
year at our home. She Is a black
Cocker Spaniel and is almost our
sole remaining luxury as we cope
with a dwindling Senior Citizen net
Income. unless you can count our
ever-mounting medical expenses
as luxwies.
Susie Is a real Florida Cracker.
She thrives In the hot Florida
su nshine and hates cold and rainy
weather. When she has to go out
these brisk autumn mornings in
Syracuse, she looks at us with
· pleading eyes that seem to say,
"When are we going home? It's
c-c-cold up here." In Florida we
have a quarter-acre fenced yard
and she ·s pends much of her time
chasing kids on bicycles as they
pass on the street before our front
yard. In Syracuse we have only a
fraction of that much space for her
to run and ., she gets bored and fat
whlle we wait for the doctor's O.K.
for my wife to make the trip back to
Florida.
I can't remember a time when I
have not had a dog ln the lamlly.
They have ranged all the way from
hunting dogs to house pets. They all
had their own personalities and
each one . has left some fond
remembrance. They have ranged
all the way from very smart to very
dumb but each seemed to have
some. redeeming trait. In short, I
like dogs. When we bought Susie
from a lady who raised Cocker
show dogs, we thought we might
raise some registered dogs of our
own. However~ as Susie became old
enough to breed, we had some sober
second thoughts. Our record with
puppies is·awful! We m•ver seem to
want to part with them until we are

swamped with dogs and veterinary
knew no bounds and for several
bllls. So Susie remains a spinster
days she never left Mary's side. For
beea use you can't teach old dog·
pure devotion, she is a champion.
fanciers like us new tricks. To sell
If Susie had been a rrilte larger,
one of Susie's puppies would he like
she might even now he joining her
selling a member of the family.
five brothers and sisters among the
When Susie first cametollvewith
aristocrats. of the canine world -a
show dog. However, she would
us In Florida, we stUI had two of i:lur
old dogs which we had t;~ken with us
never be large enough, to join that
elite class, so her owner sola her to
frorn Ohio. We had lost our orlglrial
Susie wno was given to us by Mrs. ·us at a modest price compared to
Jean RJdgway about 15 years ago
the sums the rest .of the , litter
and missed her so much that we
brought the lady who specializes In
breeding Cocker Spaniels for peowanted another Susie to take her
ple who enter ·them In competition
place. Our present Susie is so much
around the · country. Because of
like old Susie it Is uncanny. She also
their Intelligence Cocker Spaniels
Is a worrier when either of us Is
are a popular class In dog shows
aw;~y and tickled when we return.
and ihose that are well groomed
When Mary spent a week fn the
hospital recently, Susie spent the .and well trained are widely deweek with her nose glued to the . manded for dog shows over the
enttre couritry but particularly in
window watching lor her return.
the South where dog shows a nd
When . Mary ca me home her joy

horse shows are especially popular.
To those of you who don't like
dogs, I I&lt;now this column Is boring.
Why are you still reading it? Most
prople read for two reasons: to be
informed or to be entertained. That
Is where newspapers have an
advantage over ' televl.slon. Yo11
have the freedom to read ~hat you
prefer without having someone
else's opinion forced on you whlle
you walt !Or the next program. That
Is why I am always amazed at
readers' letters objecting to publication of opinions with which they
disagree: Instead, why not skip
them ' and. accept the
publisher's
.
right to publish what he pleases. It
would be an Insipid editorial page
Indeed which skirted all controversy and dillerence of oplillons.
There! I've said It and I'm glad!•.

literally staging a one-man clinic.
EAST MEIGS - A young, but
Lancers Keith Barnhart and Jay
determined Eastern Eagle basketEtheridge added 18 and 19 points
ball· squad stumbled through the
respe&lt;;tlvely.
first period, then settled down to
Junior forward Kevin Barber..
post a dramatic comeback bid In
who had a good night from the floor
I
the second halftha t fell short, 74-65, . which Included four In a row, paced
at the hands of the Federal Hocking
Eastern with 17 points, freshman
Lancers.
Brent Bissell added 15, junior
At one point tralllng by 19 points,
Royce Blssel110, 50llhomore Eddie
Eastern cut Federal Hocking's lead
Collins 10, and sophomore Greg
to just seven points In the fourlb
Leachman nine.
quarter and had the chance to cut It
In a tfrrld llrst period Federal
to five, however, a costly turnover
Hocking blitzed the Eagles with
took · some of the sting out ol
stzzllng speed and a blazing 70
Eastern's spirited attack.
,. percent shOoting percentage from
the floor. Matlack provided most of
The game marked the season
opener for both clubs. The victory
the fireworks as the Lancers rolled
to a 28-12 first period lead.
marked the first win. for new head
coach Tim Simpson, a former
Eastern came to life In the second
Eagle assistant.
period as Barber got hot from the
Two major points were cited as
corner, allowing Eastern to cut the
the difference ln the game FH lead to 11. Several costly fouls
Eastern's slow start In the first
and a hot night from the charity
stripe by the Lancers quickly ·
period and the results at the foul
line, where the Lancers sank 16 of 21 ·eclipsed that comeback a !tempt ·as
attempts lor 76 percent, compared
the half ended 42-25.
to .seven of 19 for Eastern (36
The young and hustling Eagles
per,;ent). Both squads sank 28 field
surprised the Lancers In the second
half, cutting down on turnovers and
goals.
Federal Hocking's Randy 'Ma- playhlng a more aggreSsive defentlack, a 6-1 senior guard, was slve game. Eastern outscored the
Lancers 15-141n the third frame, the
perhaps the single most Important
factor of the game as he sank 3.1 score 56-40.
Both clubs played evenly until
points, including a red-hot 14 of 25
midway through the final round
from the field. Matlack also
grabbed 14 rebounds, made eight when Eastern suddenly gained new
recoveries, and· two assists while

llle. Coil~ sank three jumpers,
Barber added two, and Leachman
hit th~boards hard to put EHS t)ack
Into contention. Royce Bissell alsO
grabbed a key rebound and canned
a long jumper In the comeback
effort. Time ran out, however, and
Eastern dropped a hard-fought
74-65 decision.
Federal Hocking hit 28 of 64 field
goal attempts for 43 percent, hlt 16
of 21 for 76 percent from the line,
grabbed 37 rebounds, nine steals,
two assists, and had 19 turnovers.
Matlack had 14 rebound s. Barnhart
seven and Etheridge seven.
Eastern canned 28 of 71 for 39
percent, had 12 steals, four assists,
28 rebounds and 24 turnovers. Greg
Leachman had eight rebounds,
Royce Bissell seven, and Brent
Bissell lour.
Reserve Contest
After leading the reserve contest
28-18, Eastern got In foul trouble
before dropping a heartbreaking
48-46 decision at the wire. Brian
.Tabler led the winners with 10
points, Phil Gillam had 10, Doug
Kincaid had eight, aild Tim Creger
had eight. Brian Durst had a good
game of 14 points for Eastern, while
Darrln Drenner and Tony Hendrix
had nine, and Allen Tripp six.
Eastern next plays a week on
Friday when it hosts Kyger Creek.
EASTERN {65)- Royce BlsseliS-().10; Sr'E'nt

BLssell &amp;-3-15; Kevi n Barber S-1-17; Paul
Collins()..(}.(); Jeff CaldweU t-(}..2; Jim Caldwell
1.0.2: Eddie Colilns 5-0-10; Jim Weber 0-0-0:
Tone Chapman (}.0-0; Greg.Leachman 3-3-9;

Joe Runyon Q.O..O.Totals 28-7-M.
FEDERAL HOCKING (74 ) - Randy
Matlack·14-5-33; Keith Barnhart &amp;6-1~: Tony
Takach 1.0.2; .Jay Etheridge 7· ~1· 19 ; Terry

l::&gt;eeter 1..0-2; Stacy Tate M.O. Tolall '!8-16-74.
By ~uariers:

Eastern ........ ........ l2 13 15 25-65
E'H ........ ............. 28 14 14 18-74

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

Far-out proposa)8 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J_ac_k_;_A_n_d_er_so_n
WASHINGTON Have the remote or other surreptitious equip- lion by some substance In the air
people at the Los Alamos National ment, the existence of which will
they breathed, the food they ate or
Laboratory been watching too not be apparent to them."
the water they drank. The hazards
many Saturday morning children's
The concept seems to be a
Inherent In this sltualln could be
TV shows?
psychological "metal detector"
quickly overcome without risk of
Some of the anti-terrorist devices that C&lt;J.n scan everyone within Its
Injury or death. We do not, a t
they've recommended to the Fed· range and Identify those under
present, know how to do this, but It
e r a l Emergency Management stress. It is not clear how the
Is an exciting averiue to explore." ·
Agency sound as if they were stolen machine would differential(' be- · The study, reviewed by m y
from an old Buck Rogers ser!al tween a potential terrorist and, say,
associates Donald Goldberg and
or even Wile E. Coyote's fiendishly . someone whO's just had a domestic 'Indy Badhwar, notes that developclevf'r traps for the Roadrunner. . spat or is worried a bout being
ment of such a . weapon would be
Here are some of the far-out parked In a towaway zone on
useful to "many other sectors of the
proposals:
Pennsylvania Avenue.
military and civilian communities
- "A potential assassin entering
- "Human Performance Enas well ."
the White House for a tour or hancement In a Counter-Terrorist
There's a certain Irony In the
reception, or standing in a crowd Context" is a benign weapon that
respectability the scientists seem
waiting for a presidential appear- would appear! to He-Man and other
prepared to give this Idea, which
ance, or a terrorist going through cartoon heroes. Secret Injection of
sounds exactly like the empty
airport security or passport control, chemicals Into food , water or air · threats of radicals 15 or more years
Is likely to be under stress," the delivered to the bad guys would put
ago to pour LSD into municipal
laboratory experts point out in a !hem to sleep instantly."
reservoirs .
report to FEMA.
"For example," the Los Alamos
Th(l study does not address the
" The manifold symptoms of such study explains, "hostages and
possibility that while the CIA, for
stress may make such persons guards could be overwhelmed by
example , ·may be putting Cuba
recognizable through the use of sleep in a hostage-barricade sltuaasleel:' for a bloodless takeover,

Fidel Castro may be doing the same
to Manhattan or Miami.
Zapping terrorists with microwave radiation could kill them, stun
them or at least modify their
behavior by changing their "~r­
ceptio'IS," the study claims. And It
suggests that the Kremlin is
already ha rd at work 'on this
diabolical ray gun : "There are
reports of Eurasian communist
countries performing research with
combined fields ot signals from
several different microwave frequencies to produce at least
perceptual distortions in humans."
For the lime being, Los Alamos
recommends that FEMA limit Its
psycholOgical microwave cooking
to experimenting with mice.
Footnote: A FEMA -spokeswoman said that the Los Alamos study
was m erely a catalog of potential
ideas, a nd that FEMA has spent no
funds to follow up on the proposals .

SHORT JUMPER - Melp
guanl Kevin Barber (22) pull! up

a field goal alternpt against
Federal Hocking durtng Tuesday's nOIH!OIIference game at
Eastern. Barber had 17 points ln
leading the Eagle ollenae. Federal Hocking won the oo~,
7-HiS. Oihers shown In this Scott
WoHe pholo lnchade E&amp;Mern's
Brent Bissell (34) and the
Lancers, Randy Matlack (34)
Keith Bamharl, ( 10) and Stacy
TalA&gt; (12) .

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'

J.C. WOOFTER, M.D., F.A.A.D.
BOARD CER11FIED DERMATOLOGIST

. ACNE. DISEASES, TUMORS &amp; CANCERS OF THE SKIN

W.HERE: 224 E. Main St.

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WHEN: 2nd &amp; 4th Thursday Mornings
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL: 992-3380

Howard Baker' private citizen:....·___J_a_m_es__;]_;_._K_ilp_a_tr_ic_k

WASHINGTON -Senate Repub- his greatest achievement as mojorlicans will hold their organizational ity leader , and that was his answer :
meeting on Nov. 28. The llrst order He made the place work.
of business will be to elect a new
" We have shown once again," he
majority leader to succeed retiring said In his farewell address, " that In
Howard Baker of Tennessee. Baker the clamorous, cumbersome, chaoIs not a very big fellow- he stands 5 tic way we do business here, we do it
feet 7 - but he Is leaving a large In the people's name and with the
j&gt;atr of shoes to be filled .
people's consent, and in a manner
One thinks back to other majority that reflects with astonishing clarleaders of recent years - Bob Byrd Ity the' passion and conviction and
of West Virginia, Mike Mansfield of ultimate common sense of the
Montana , Lyndon Johnson of American prople themselves. "
Texas. Each was effective In his
Baker took the occasion of his
own way, Johnson by brute force of farewell to say some t hlngs about
will, Mansfield by gentle persua- the Senate that carry special weight
sion, Byrd by shrewd bargaining. beeause of his expertence. Surely·
Those of us who have watched there must he a better way to do the
Howard Baker from the press Senate's business "so that the
gallery for the past four years months we pass at leisure In the
might credit his remarkable suc- beginning of a con~~lpnal sescess to a single quality: patience.
sion need not be redeemed In l.ongBaker has demonstrated other hours of agony and turmoil at the
fine qualities In the post - a lively end."
sense of humor, an intuitive
Such remonstrances are heard
understanding of his colleagues' whenever a Congress nears adpolitical necessities, and a surpass-. journment, Baker acknowledged,
ing knowledge of the Senate's rules but nothing ever is done about the
of parliamentary procedure. But chaos, "and I fear we are becoming
. patience, the kind of patience for accustomed to this accursed syswhich old Job at last w.on salvation,
tem when that Is the last thing we
has been the characterlstlcwe have should do." Senate procedures
most admired.
demand reform, Baker was saying,
Job, you will recall , sullered from but the situation demands someboils from head to .foot: he lost Ills thing more: It de'manda a change of
sheep, Ills camels, Ills oxen, his sons heart. "We are In danger of losing
and Ills daughters, and still he the spirit of civility that can sustain
remained steadfast In his faith . So,
us In times of political stress and ,
too, with Baker and the Senate.
legislative logjams."
There were times Baker had to
"The Senate cannot fight a
suffer worse than bolls - he had to guerrilla war over every Issue all
suffer, for example, the lnsuffera·
the time. We cannot be sniping at
ble vanity of Senator Obnoxious,
one another and talking Issues to
D-.O hlo - and ·be had to suffer the
death while the· essential work of
whims and Impulses and stubborn·
government goes undone .. , If we
ness
of others ln.the chamber. He
cannot
resurrect the spirit of
'
chivalry that once reigned here, at
Today iS Wednesday, Nov. 28, the333rddayofl9!W. Tllereare33dayslelt never lost Ills temper, at least In
public, and he never stopped trying
least we must restore some sembIn .:.;;.~lrthdays: Actress Hope Lange is 51. Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo.: Is to make the democratic process lance of civlllty and commonality of
work.
purpose."
,
47 Singer Randy Newman is 40.
S.omeone asked Baker what was .
Thought for today: "The passion for setting prople ri~t is In Itself an
That Is about as close as Bilker
1:1
atfllctlve disease." ...l: Marianne Moore, poet (lll!7-1lm) '

Today in history

Lancers spoil Eagles debut
By SCOTI' WOLFE

Meet Susie. Too·_-----~----'-__L_·owe_l_l_W:_in_ge~u

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, 01'1io

ever came to speaking severely to
his colleagues. He kept the Senate's
affection and respeot beeause he
never broke his word and he always
found time to listen. Sllld Lawion
Chiles of F:lorlda: "He is, above a ll,
a reasonable man." No matter who
the Republicans name as majority
leader next week - Dole of Kansas,
or Lugar of Indiana, or McClure of
Idaho - Baker's successor will
have a high example to follow.
What's ahead for Howard Baker?
He told the Senate thai he believes It

possible to be simultaneously both a
public servant and a private citizen.
"I Intend to show m y abidlngly
skeptical colleagues by my own
example how to be a use 'public
citizen.' "
" I believe there is life after the
"Senate," he said, "and I Intend to
live that life to the fulL"
That farewell may not have been
exactly an announcement of his
Int ention to run for the presidency
In 1988, but It had a nice ring.

Letter to editor
Try cutting exp~nses
This letter is c'oricernlng the one to ' much mon&lt;&gt;y from any one
percent Income tax, which the person. Well, Mr. Seyler. this tax
village of Pomeroy Is trying to put would cost me S3.!W a week, until
In effect. 1 don't think It is fair for my next ·pay raise, and then of
the mayor and the · council of course. it would be more. At $3.84 a
Pomeroy to shove this down our week, times 52 weeks In a year
throats. There r -e a lot of people totals $199.68. Now $200 might not be
who work In Pomeroy, who live a lot to you, but to me $200 Is an
elsewhere, Including myself. If I'm awful lot of mon£&gt;y. I've never given
going to have to pay more tax, I'd S'nJ away and I don't plan to start
· prefer to pay It-to the town In which now! You also stated that eventulllve, so 1 wlll be able to enjoy the ally you might reach a point where
Improvements which would de- you could cut the levy down, or
· velop from the tax, .Why should we . ellminate It altogether.
ball Pomeroy out? At my place of
Now I don't mean to be calling
employment, which Is in Pomeroy, you or any member of the Pomeroy
there are very few employed there council a liar, but I don't believe It,
who also llve In Pomeroy. As a · if you manage to get this tax In
matter of fact, there are a lot 'or my · ~!feet, I'm afraid we'll be stuck with
co-workers who' )ive In West It forever.
VIrgtnla. Pomeroy's financial prob- ' . Before yo~ reach In my pocket
it.. .s are of no concern of theirs or and take $200 a year, why don't you
min~. 118 why shc .J(I they or m~lf
try llvlng Within your means? Try
be forced to pay the tax to ball cutting expenses here and there,
Pomeroy out?
I'msurethevlllageofPomeroywUI ·
Mayor Seyler even had the gall to 'survive! - Gene Godwin, 144
state that this tax_would not amount
Hudson St., Middleport, Ohio 45700.

"'

-

II

Getting the family together in a good reading habit, like
sharing the daily newspaper, could be the start of a
healthy, lifetime habit.
Bringing you national , world and local news, your
newspaper is one of the best buys in information around.
Reading your newspaper is a real growing experience, an
entertainment and an effective, in-house learning tool for
your kids!

The Daily Sentinel
\

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

The Victory Circle••
"THE VICTORY-CIRCLE
By SCOTT WOLFE
Once again basketball season Is
he re . and after the first outing of
area cage teams all Meigs County
schools are without a victory .
A frigid first half against Athens
led to Meigs' downfalL Meigs
showed much character, however,
with a near comeback a nd lm. proved effort the second haft. Now
that the "bad game" Is out of their
system Meigs can resume the TVC
championship hunt!
WhPn wa s the last time a
Southern Tornado basketball team
lost by 29 points, or for that matter,
when has a Southern cage team iost
its season opener???
At this time I do not know the
exact answer, bul l do know thalli
has been quite awhile . I hope to
have those answers in a later
edition of "The Victory Circle."
In any event, that happening Is
rare. but maybe Southern can chalk
that one up to experience and get on
the right track this weekend at
Wate rford.
Last week, the young and
ine xperienced Tornadoes lost to a
very tough Gallipolis team, 66-37.
Southern's boys will again rtnd the
vlciory circle many times before
this season is over.
This past weekend I traveled to
Springfield, Ohio and the campus of
Wittenburg University where
former Southern Tornado Star Rod
Littlefield saw much action In his
de b)Jt as a Wittenburg Tiger.
Littlefield was quite impressive in
his initia l college effort, scoring six
points (three of six from the field),
grabbing three rebounds, notching
three assists, a nd one s teaL
Wittenburg won the contest 92-76
over Urbana.
What makes that effort most
impressive is the quality basketball
program that exists at Wittenburg;
28 consecutive years without
losing season. an average of20wins
per year during the past 28 years,
1977 NCAA Division III champions,
1983 a nd 1976 Division Ill runnersup, a third place finisher in the
NCAA in 1900 ... and the list goes on
a nd on.
Head Coach Larrv Hunter ' a
native of The Plains, ha s posted an
18.1-49 record the past seasons at
Wittenburg .
While at thP Wittenburg-Urbana
contest. I also ran onto another
Meigs Countian , Pebbles Bl ake, a
1981 graduate of Eastern High
School. Pebbles Is a senior a t
Url;lana and is ma jori ng in

a

-

busi ness.

S)w has also been a cheerleader
at Urbana the past four years and
does an excellent job on the
chf'&lt;'rleading squad.

I

lsn'l. It?
Defensively, Southern was mid·
way down the Jist, a mark !bat could
have been Improved had the offense
spent more time on the field.
Southern's defense was In the top 10
early In the season.
Eastern was ranked eighth offen·
slvely and 17th defensively as
co-champions of the SVAC. Meigs
was ranked third and second
respectively.
What team Is the all-time leader
In the SVAC? Well, without a doubt
. Kyger Creek has totally dominated
the league, compiling a 96-16-1
league record and 147-59-7 overall
record since 1962's grid campaign
to the present time. These and the
followlngJigures are from research
I have done on the SVAC as
published in issues at "The Dally
Sentinel."
During that time Kyger Creek
has won 15 SVAC football championships. The second best record
belongs to North Gallta with a
127-76-4 overall record a nd 75-40-1
SVAC mark. Eastern Is close
behind with a 122-87-3overall record
and 77-33-4 SV AC mark . Eastern
has claimed the crown six times
and North Ga lli~ has three times:
(This In clu de s ties or cochampionships).
Southern owns a 91 -127-3 overall
record and a 41-55-1 mark In the
SVAC. For several seasons Southern was a member of the MOVC
and not in the SVAC. Southwestern
owns a 66-135-2 overall tally, 34-8lln
the SVAC; Hannan Trace Is 48-143-8
a nd 23-89·2; while Symmes Vallev
was 3-32 inside the SVAC.
Southern won the SVAC In 1972
Southwestern tied Eastern in 1900'
and Hannan Trace won the ti tie i~
1979. Incidentally, Southern has
placed second three limes and was
undefeated in the league 'Aith a 6-1
mark in 1977 when a teachers'
strike eliminated Southern's chances for a title.
Whal a better way than to
officially end a footba ll season than
with th e c las s ic ' 'Eas t er n Southern " rivalry.
Speaking of that rivalry 1 will
close this week's column with a
roster of those who partlclpatedin
this year's rival classic. Although
many names are missing from lhe
line-up, many outstanding athletes
did compete and proved that they
still "can" play.

Riddcwh promoted
CINCINNATI (AP)- TheCinclnna ti Reds have promoted Greg
Rtddoch to director of minor league
teams.
Riddoch. 38, has been assistant
director of player development and
seouttng since 1983.

WedneSday. November 28, 1984

Marauderettes post 52-41 victory over Eaglettes

ROCK SPRINGS_ After posting
a season oj&gt;enlng . victory over
Federal Hocking on Monday, the
Eastern Eagles dropped a 52-41
decision to the Meigs Marauderettes here Tuesday evening In
non-league bas~e tball action.
·
Meigs took an early 4-1 lead in a
slow, but competitive first period
and never looked back as Eastern
couldn't muster a necessary com eback bid.
In the second frame Meigs
Increased Its lead on field goals .by
B. J. Gordon, two by Julie Miller,
and on!' each by Rhonda Haddox
and Jenny Couch. Eastern 's Angie
Spencer carried most of the
Eaglettes' weight by scoring eight
second period points, the score 18-13
at the half.
A balanced third period a ttack
gave Meigs a bigger-edge, despite
seven points by Eastern's Margaret Horner, the period ending
38-26. Eastern held its own in the
final round but couldn 'I gain on the
hustling Marauderettes. The final
buzzer sounded with the score52-41.

throWs with just six seconds
remaining to secure the EHS will.
In the reseiVe contest Janet
Werry poured In 16 points to lead
the
Eaglettes to a 26-11
trl young
h
ump over Meigs. Besides Werry's game-high 16 points, Beverly
Wig 1
a added four, while Patty
Durst, Lesa Rucker and Arlene
Ritchie added two each .
F or Federal Deana Bennett had
five, Jane Burdette four, and
Teresa Tracy two. Eastern hit nine

Eastern's Angle Spencer had a
game-high 19 points, . Margaret
Homer added nine. JUlie MU!er
paced Meigs with 16 key markers,
while
J . Gordon added 14.
Th B.w1
e
nners canned 22 field
goals, hit eight of 12 tree throws,
d
m1 ted
an com . I
15 personal fouls ,
Eastern sank 15 of 37 for 40 percent
a nd hit 11 of 23 from the Une for 48
percent . E astern had 25 rebounds
led by Spencer's 10 and Homer's
seven. EHS also had 25 twnovers,
four steals, and 10 personal fouls.
Eastern edged Meigs In the
reserve contest 20-18 led by Janet
Werry's six and four each by Lesa
Rucker and Arlene RitChie. Dee
He nderson led MetgswtthlOpolnts.
In Monday night's 34-33 triumph
over Federal _Hocking, Angle
Spencer canned 15 points to lead all
scorers. The senior point guard
paced Eastern to a 19-16 bafttime
lead by scoring eight first haft
points , while Margaret Horner
added six.
Tanya Savoy sank one of two tree

Wednesday. November 28. 1984

of 35 fro th field ~ 25
and had;; re~unds 1:; by :rl~nt
Nutter with nine a~d We e~~
eight
rry
·
EASTERN (41) - Angle Spencer 8-J.I9;

LOCUST AND PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Tonya Savoy 2-1-5; MeHnda Mankin Hl-2;
Krlsll Hawk0-5-5; Horner4-l-9:
Rucker

0-l·l Tu1a1oo IJ-11-41.

wa

·

.The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy- MiddlepOrt. Ohio

TELEPHONE 112-3471

MEIGS (Ill) _ J e nny Coucl! 2-0-4; Rhonda

Haddox 2-1-5; Jenny Miller 4-0-8; JeMI
Swartz O-I-l ; Julie Miller 7-2-16; B. J . Gordon
S.3-1'; Jodi Harrtson 1.0.2; and Ruth Fray
1~2. Tulaloo ~U-51.

~

By quarteno:

NEW STORE HOURS:

•

Ina

I 12 13 15---41

4 14 :!114-52

ATTENTION
DEER
HUNTERS!

8 A.M. to 10 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
MB

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS

Fresh, Regular

U.S.D.A. Choice
Boneless Flat Cut

rwnpor

North Gallia faces
rebuilding task -in '84
Wllh the loss of six players from Wilson feels Southern and Eastern
last year's squad, Coach Bruce are the top teams to watch, but
Wilson faces another rebuilding believes all clubs could be in the
thick of the race.
task at North Gallia High School.
North Gallia opens Its season
Entering his fourth season as
Friday
against Oak Hill. Other
head coach, Wilson, a product of the
non-league
foes Include Ashland
Gailla Academy High School sysFamily,
South Point and
Holy
tem and Morehead State Univer·
Crosslanes.
Wilson
is being assisted
stty , lost two AU-SVAC performers,
Pat
Stout.
·
by
Eric Penick and Anthony BlackPIRATE
ROSTER
burn via graduation; Thurman
Players
Hl. Yr.
Holliday, a 6-0senior, transferred to
Todd Deel ........ .... .. ... ...... .. ........ .. .. 6-ll 11
John Diddle ...... . ... ..... .. ...... ... . ........ 5-U t2
GaUipolls; Jackie Glassburn a nd
Wayne Dlddl{' .......... ............. .... .... . 5-9 11
Tlnn Smith did not report this fall.
Brian Hawks ..... ... .... .. .... ...... .. ....... G-9 12
Glassburn was the team 's best
Mike- Kemper ....... ...... .. ... ..... ... ...... 6-J 10
Da vid Ha mmo ns ... . ... ... ..... . ...... .... .. G-3 11
foul shooter a year ago, while Smith
Pa ul Leo .. .. ... ..... .. ...... . .... ... ..... ... ... 5-8 11
led the Pirates in field goal · Earl Mayo . ... ...... . ... ... ... ........ .. ... :.. 5-11 11
S!£'Ye Thaxton .. ........ ... .... ........... ... 5-9 11
percentages.
NG SCHEDULE
North Galli a has just two players Dille - Loclltloo
remaining with varsity experience
Nov . .l) ... ..... . ..... . . . .... .. .............. . Oak HUI
[){lc. 7 . ...... .. ........... ....... .... ..... At So uthern
- 5-9 senior Brian Hawks and
Dec. U .. ........ ....... At Ashland Holy Family
Wayne Diddle, a 5-9 junior, who has
[)(oc_· . 14 .. ....
.. ...... ..... ·Eastern
f.Jec . 15 ... .. .. .... .. .... ... .. ... .. .. .... ... South Potnt
been playing varsity ball since his
Dc&gt;c. 21. .. ... .. ... .. ...... ......... At SouthwesTern
freshman year.
))('c . Z7 ·~ .. .. .
.. .. ... . Holiday Tourn. at
Although North Gallia will be
Southwestern
,Jan. 5 ....... .. . .. ....... ... ............... Crosslanes
fielding a young, Inexperienced
.Jan. 11 .. .. .. .. .......... .... ... AT Hannan Trace
squad. Wilson said he is pleased with .Jan. 15 .. .... ...... .. ..... .. .... ...... At South Point
the progress, adding, "We have .Jan. lS ........ ..... ......... ...... .... .. Kyger Creek
Jan. 2&gt; ....... ... .. .. .... ... .. ... .. .. ........ Southern
gone back to the basics and have .ran.
29 ....... ...... ............. ......... At Oak Hill
looked good In scrimmage." The
F'rb. 1 .. .. ... .... .. .. ... .. .. .. ............ At Eastern
Feb. 8 ............ ... . .. ............... Southwestern
Pirate mentor feels a good start will
F'Pb. 12 ... ... .... .. .. ...... .. Ashland Holy Famlly
help his club as it matures.
Feb. 15 ...... .............. .. .......... Hann~n Trace
" Uwe can get someearly wlns, we Feb. 16 ...... .. .......... ........... :. At CrOsslanes
could have a goodyear. The players F"eb. 22 .. .. ...... .. ....... ...... .. AI Kyger Crrek
are working hard. have excellent r------------~
attitudes a nd we will be m e
The Daily Sentinel
aggressive than in past seasons,"
Wilson said .
(USPS 145-IIQI)
A Division of Multimedia, Int.
Regarding the rest of the SVAC,

THE
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deer this season.

Cut· Wrapped· Frozen
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r--------------------------

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••

on

STEMWARE &amp; GIFTWARE
&amp; BARWARE

P ubl is hed f' Ver y afternoon, Monday
th rough Fr'lday, 111 Court St., y the

MPigs Cou nty l_s well rPpresented
this cage SPason at campuses
across Ohio. Matt Littlefield , Rod's
older brother. a nd Gene Cole are
mPmbers of the Martella Pioneer
ba sketball team which is currently
unde feated at 2-D.
Mil II and Ge ne have both scored
double figures In each contest.
Map, last year's leading re·
bounder, aga in has cont rolled the
boards, while Gene was exceptional
witb a 28 point season opener.
Matt and Rod arc the sons of Dan
a nd Shirley Littlefield of .Racine.
GPnP is the son of Homer and
Nal)cy Cole 'of Tuppers Plains.
~ent Wolfe. now In his junior year
a t Rio Gra nde. has been an integral
part of the Redmen's success
during the past couple of seasons
and a major part in their 1984-85 :&gt;-0

season record.
Wolfe, a former all-state selection
from Southern, has continued his
role as point guard for thP Redmen.
Thus far this season, Wolfe has
averaged double figures on another
Rio team loaded wilh young ta lent.
Wolfe is lhe son of Larry and
Dolores Wolfe, Racine.
fT SEEMS that Meigs County has
ma(le ils contribution to Ohio
colle ges as ·an of the above teams
are currently undefeated . Meigs .
County can indeed be proud!
A not her Meigs County sta ndout ,
Nick Riggs, a TVC all-league point
guard from Meigs High School, Is
starting on the Kenyon College
junior varsily squad and is a
ca ndidate for the varsity roster .
Nick is the son of Keith and
Barbara Riggs, Middleport.
Good luck, Meigs Counllans!
Kt&gt;ep up the good work ...
Although the transition between
footba ll and basketball has already
taken place, there are some loose
ends from the football season yet to
be tied. First of all, congratulations
to those players chosen to all-league
learns and to those chosen as
a ll -state selections.
I.:ooklng back at the 1984 grid
season and Its final statistics we
find that Southern· was ranked last
offensively of the 26 teaJTiS in this
area, one reason for Its lack of
success. That could be expected,
however, noting that 10 of 11
offensive starters were lost to
graduation; 23 seniors overall.
Experience "IS" bard 1b replace,
~

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Membt"r: Thr Assoclatf&gt;d Press, In·
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thru December 1st, 1984.
Quantit y R!ghts Re se rved . Nol R es ponsible
For Typographical or Pic ton al Erro rs .

MASON, W. VA.

With Coupon

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Pomeroy-Middl8port, Ohio

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 28, 1984 :

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
.BASKETBALL TICKETS .
FOR
DE(.
5, 1984 GAME
.
--'

'

.

'

Pick Up At Local Foodlcind
No Purche~se Nttessary

:'"-•:.
;
......................................~ :

We Reserve The Richt To
Limit Quantities

......

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM -10 PM ·
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Marianne Carsey

PRICES. IN EFFECT THRU SAT., DEC. 1, 1984

C~rsey birthday
'
f&lt;Jin'l\lnne Carsey, daughter of
Rlitli: Carsey, Roilte ~. Middleport,
o~ her second birthday
~tly with a family observance.
S'"';IS the granddaughter&lt;tMr. and
M~iHenry Carsey. As apart of her
bittiipay observance, she spent the
day··With her great-grandmother,
Rut~Carsey at Waverly .
Marianne, who now weighs 20
pounds was the smallest swvlvlng ·
infant ever born at the Holzer
Medical Center. She weighed one ·
pound,lOounceswhenshewasborn
on Nov. l, 1!182, and · was subsequently transferred to Children's
Hospital where she remalned several months.

OlD VIRGINIA

PORK SAUSAGE
ll.
IOAHO

99&lt;

Mr. and Mrs. Eric Diddle,
f!idwell , announce the birth of a son,
Oct. 6, at the Holzer Medical Center.
The eight pound,l3 ounce lnfant has
been Jonathan Robert.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs, John Wamsley, Cheshire,
and matern~l great-grandparents
· \l1'e Mr. and Mrs . Virgil Wamsley,
Cheshire, and Garnet Donohue,
Point Pleasant. Thepatemaigrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Pooler, Middleport, ·and Waid
Diddle, Van Lear, Ky., and the
great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Pooler, Chesterhill,
Mrs. Marie Roy and Oval Diddle,
lloth or Racine.

ONIONS

4 FOR$1

Church dinner held

HOLLY FARM

CHICKEN THIGHS

CHOC. CHIPS
12 Ot.7

ll.

9(

99(

·. The annual hruvest dlnner was
~d ~ntly at the First Presbyter.lallfhurch In Middleport with about
!lls.bers and friends attending.
· . anj from the Syracuse and
H rrlsonvilie Presbyterian
olurches were guests. Turkey and
aU the trtmmlngs were served at the
potJuck dinni'r. A collection was
tat:en for the needy people of
Ei}llopia.

RMS

Sausage •••••••••

Chicken ••••••••••••••••• 39(
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BUCKET

Cube Steaks ••• ~~••••• $199

CRISPY SERVE

Bacon •••••..•••••• ~B.:~K··· 99&lt;

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Round

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Ground Chuc:k!'o •••• $129

~Chester

Council
·:conducts recent
Meigs meeting
-

LEAN

ORE-IDA

PORK STEAK

FRENCH FRIES
32

$139-

0•·$129

Pkg.

DAKOTA

BREAD D
s 16 oz.

'
.
. , Plans .for the observance of
qilarterly birthdays to be ollserved
·oiJ·Dec. 4 were made when Chester
Council 323, Daughters of America,
'!let recently at lhe hall.
; Alta Ballard, councilor, presided
; :at the mretlng. Goldie Krackom·
-berger was reported home from the
'lpspltai, and it was also noted that
11\elma White has a new grandson.
Nomination of officers will also
'lake place at the next meeting.
Helen Wolf was planisl. Others
~!tending were Margaret Tuttle,
Octa Ward, Ethel · Orr, Esther
Smith, Thelma While, Jo Ann
Bal)ID. Iva Powell, Eva Robson,
Erma Oeland, Ada Bissell, Lora
Damewood, Opal Hollon, Marcia
· Keller, Charlotte Grant, Doris
prueser, Virginia Newlun, Mae
McPeek, Beulah Maxey, Pauline
Rldenour, Ruth Smith, Sandra
';White, Sadie Trussell, Vlrglnla Lee,
Faye Kirkhart. and Mary K. Holter,

Bananas ••••••••• ~•••

Calendar ·

•

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172 OES Middleport
· Will hold Its annual Installation &lt;t
offiCers Friday, 7: :lJ p.m., at the
MiiJclleport Masonic Hall.

l
I

SATIJRDAY
'

ftAClNE -A holiday baZaar,
•UIOA Food ltempa Glady Accepted •Not llaiiJICifllible For Typographical Errora

;;
"
."
:
·

sponsored by the Raclne United
Methodist Women, will be held
Saturday, 2 to 7 p.m., at the
Racine United Methodist
Church. Craft Items and homemade baked goods featured.
Dinner to be served.

, WEST COLUMBIA - The
West Columbia United MethOdist Church will sponsor a .
bazaar Saturday, 11 to 6 p.m. at
• the Mason firehouse. Soup,
· aandwlcbes, homemade baked
· aocxJa, candy and crafts will be
avaDable.

4 /$1

VALLEY BELL

2°/o Milk ..•••.•. ~~L•··· $169

GRADE A

Large Eggs ..... ~~·:: ••• 79 &lt;

!

LOAVES '

VALVOLINE PERMANENT

t,.
F
.
.
.
$329
.
An 1- reeze .... ~~(···· .

BANQUET FROZEN

TV Dinners •••••••
II OZ.

69 (

REAMES FROZEN

DOMINO 1OX, DARK OR LT.

Brown Sugar l·~-=~2 f$1 Noodles ••••••~2.~z.:~G····· 69&lt;
._ ...
.• COUPON·..........
.••.•.•.•••.....
•
•

.pUREX DETERGENT
· 147

Oz.$3 59

Linit Ona Par (uitomer
o....l Only At Powell's ·
Offer Expirts Dt&lt;. 1, 1914

PEAK

THRIFT KING

PINTO BEANS

PAPER TOWELS

.. 4 Lb. Bog

99(

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powtll 's
Offer Expires Dec. 1, 1984

'
~-·----·
-

-~·-·-

-·

-·

ROLL3

f$1

limit Three Per Customer
Goo4 Only At Powtll's
Offer Expires Dec. 1, 1914

~~! ~

.

CRISCO
3lB.

.,,
&gt;.

LEG QUARTERS

Diddle birth

MEDIUM SWm

GENERIC

HILLSHI

$219

limit Ont Per Customer
Goo4 Only At Powell's
Offer bpires Ott. 1, 1984 :

•

•'

�.,..

.'
·· Wedntldey, Nowmber 28, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-S-'The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. November 28, _1984

Flower show set for weekend
M

.

Three special awards Will be
presented at the annual Christmas
fiower show to be staged SatUrday
and Sunday at the Senior Citizens
Center.
A "best of show" and "reserve
best of show" will be selected from
the blue ribbOn winners In the
artistic arrangem~ts categories,
and a creativity awarilwlll be made.
. Winners of all three of the special
awards wUl be selected by the judge.
"A Christmas Storybook" Is the
tbemeoftheshQwwhlchwllllnclude
not only artis!lc designs, but
horticulture specimens and potted

plants, butdoorwreathsand swags,
decorated Christmas packages and
contrived flowers.
The horticulture classes for the
junior division are dried roadside
materials, handcrafted ornanents
from nature, and an anil!'al or
character made from fruits and-or
vegetables, and potted plants.
In the adult division, the classes
for potted plants are Christmas
cactus, African violets, blooming
houseplants, foliage houseplants,
cacti and succulents, large aild
small variety; and specimens,
berried branches, baordleaf ever-

Rutland Garden Club
holds recent meeting
.·

GRAND OPENING - Blondena's Antiques and
collectibles, located on Route 124 near the Raelne
village line, wW have Its grand opening Saturday and

)'

Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. A 10 percent dlsoount on aU
Items wW be the grand opening feature. 81ondena and
Harold Rainer are the oweners of the new shop.

Antique shop sets grand opening
be included In their sale
merchandise.
Grand opening will take place
Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4
p.m . As a special feature, a 10
percent discount wUl be given on all
merchandise both days.
_
Sale items wUI include "everything and anything," according to
Mrs. Rainer. Antique dolls and toys,

Blondena and Harold Rainer,
Ra,cine, have turn€d their hobby into
a business.
Longtime collectors, the couple
have purchased a small bulldlng on
RDute 124 near the Racine village
line, formerly occupied by Ridenour's television, for their shop. Both
antiques and other collectibles will

lots of furniture, some wicker and
some glass are included In the
Inventory of the business.
Regular hours will be from 9 to 11
a.m. and noon to 4 p.m on Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, and 5 to 8
p.m. on Friday.
The shop will operate under the
name of Blondena's Antiques and
Collectibles.

Amateur Gardeners hold meeting
given a superior rating to the club's
August flower Show. Gladys CumIngs read the ~lub collect, and
members responded to roll call by
tellng something for which they ate
thankful. The verse of the month
was given by Clara Conroy entitled
"Before We Hardly Knew." 'There
was also a verse by Helen Steiner
Rice.
The news Item was given by Rose
Reynolds who also showed rna terials on using bowls of fruit and
garden vegetables for table centerpieces. Rose Reynolds and Clara
Conroy represented the club at the
planting of the county garden club
association of bulbs at the Carleton
Sc)lool.

Pa11 iclpa tlon in the annual county
Christmas !lower show to be staged
this weekend at the Senior Citizens
Center was planned during a
meeting of the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners held at the home of Mrs.
Ferman Moore Wednesday
evening.
Marjorie Fetty, president , talked
about the v ariousc lasses oft he show
and handed out schedules to the
members. Sandwiches and cookies
will be sold, it was noted . It was
decided to have one of Mrs. Fetty's
students make the name,cards for
the show.
It was reported that theOAGC had

Candy-covered
nut decides
election vote

Helen Sauer had the program and
used a large apothecary jar filled
with pine caries which had been
sprayed red, green and white. She
also showed different kinds of
materials which could be used to
make Christmas arrangements,
such as dried yarrow, magnolia
leaves, angel lace and grape vine.
She presented each one of the
members with a small grapevine
wreath which members decorated
wit)! shells and red ribbon bows.
Veda Davis won the door prize.
Salad and crackers, nuts and candy
were served by the hostesses, Erma
Smith, Lillian Moore and Laurette
Lee.

The entrance way theme decoration for the Meigs County Garden churches
during the and
past other
month.organizations
Plans were made for the annual
Clubs Association annual ChristmasCowersbowwUibepreparedby Christian dinner to be held atCrow's
Margaret Ella Lewis of the Rutland Steak House on Dec. 10 at 6 p.m.
followed by a meeting at ihe homeof
Garden Club.
Plans for particlpa'tlon In the show Mrs. Vernon Weber where a gift
were made at Monday night's exchange wUI be held.
meeting of the club held at the home
Devotions Included a reading
"Don't Trim the Trimmings" by
of Mrs. Harvey Erlewlne. Members
are responsible for four arrange- Mrs. Nicholson, co-hostess, and
ments in four different classes In Mrs. Erlewine gave "His Mysteartistic arrangements. Tl)e show rious Way" followed by prayer.
wlll be held this weekend at the
Mrs. Roberta Wilson. had charge
Senior Citizens Ceitter with public of the program with Mrs. Harry
vieWing hours on both Saturday and Williamson giving material on
Sunday afternoons. 'The oral judg- · "Mulches -Blankets from Nature"
Ing on Saturday wUI begin at 1 p.m.
from the Garden Path. She talked
It was reported that the publicity about the various substances suita·
book for the meeting has been sent ble for mulches Including leaves
by Margaret Weber to the state from hardwood trees, evergreen
chairman. 'The traveling prize'was bows, coffee grounds, and hulls. She
won by Mrs. James Nicholson, said that sawdust must be used with
president. Flowers have been nitrogen fertilizer. Hints on mulchprovided by club members Eva Ing using peat were given by Mrs .
Robson and Ruby Diehl to several Wilson.
Miss Ruby Diehl talked on
1
keeping
evergreens fresh sugges tS
Ing that they be cut either In the early
Beauty In God's Power
mQrnlng or the early evening and
'The power displayed by God above-,
with holly or mistletoe, to submerge
At summ{'f''s end Is shown ;
in water overnight.
With all lhr trees, their bea uty gune,
Tileir leaves. likp birds , havE&gt; flown .
Miss Diehl had the arrangement
of
the month entitled "Mum s
All standing ghastly. sidt- by sidE'.
So gruPSOme&gt; and so barP.
Galore." The door prize was won by
And all the nest s and clinging l eaves,
Mrs. Ernest Ward, and next
Like knots In uncombed hair.
month's traveling prize will be
All thE' grass that onCt' was ween.
brought by Mrs. Stella Atkins.
All nowPrs. wild or tamP.

Museum library. Additional shelvlng will be provided.

state chapters as well as papers for
First Famllies of Ohio. -Refresh·

,menta· were served by Jean
Kennedy. NextmeetJnawlllbe Dec.
16 at~ p.m. at the MUielllll.

Ot)lere attendlna were Joyce

Davia, Mr. Uld Mr. Robert Alhley,

Rae~! and Whitney, Mr-. and Mrs.
Ne~: Marks. Mr. and Mrs. Roger
~. ~skey Hill, Karen Werry,

Frances Roberts, Sue lJager, Florence Smith, Emma Jane McClintock, Louise Eden , Mike Trowbridge, Pauline RDush, P atty
Parker, and Tel.'fY Dunn.

Chester notes ·

.

Dr. and Mn. Blliy R. . ALieD,
Katie and Bobby, Westerville, were
weekend Jllll!ltl. of Mr.-and Mn,. :.
Clayton Allen.
... '
-.MrS. Audrey !lOWan and .J..ydla :

Berry, Belpre, caUedonthetrunclt, :
D!!nzel Cleland on Thlll'lday.
Mi-. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier, : ;
Jessica and Kristen and Mr. and :;
Mrs. Russ Well, Heather and Leah, .,
were Sunday diner guests of their • •
parents, Mr- and Mrs. Wayne
Dean, Pomeroy R.D.

..·-

lir~~~~!!~i~

for the best of everything
including the Cost Cutter Price
ADVERTISED mM POliCY
E&amp;ch of IIIese ed..,ertosed otttm• &lt;1 rtl(fo.llrld to be r...a,- hlli!M
lor wMI "' OK IlK '0911• S to re . ex cept H lt)Kitlc."'- notect in lttil
ld 11 we do ' "' "' ovt ol In 1dven1Md otem, . - wll o h Y'Oiol your
ChoM:.:I! ot • c omp.Brl!ll&gt;le tl em, """'"' IYIIIM!Ie , reftect"ll the ume
sav1nos or a r11n chec~ wi'I ICh will 11r1trtll you to ~Nil N
ltd\lort!MCI &lt;tem 11 the I!Jven.-d priCe 'lll'i1hin J0 ,.,... Onlio, Ofte
"'endor coupon w•l be l t:e ii'OtiKI per 111m DUI'Cf'IIIMO.

TOTAl SATISIACTlDII GUARAm!
Everything vo~ buy at Kroger 11 ;uerlnteed 101 'tOUf 10lli
wtll lactoon •eoa•dleM of mll'lulacturl!r II YOUett&lt; I'IOt Ntilfied
ttrog&amp;r 'NI!I rel)llcl vour 11em wtth m. -.me t.rend or •
compa f'ltlie brl!nd o r rafund \tOUr purcnue price

COPYRIGHT 1984 - THE KROGER CO .
ITEM S AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
NOV. 25, THROUGH SATURDAY , DEC . 1.
1984, IN GALII P!l.IS AND POM£ROYSlillES
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES . NONE SOlD TO DEALERS .

...··,. . ......\
'

~

-·-···

All forms of life and crawltng thlngs,
All animals, lar2e and small.
Have sought a plact&gt; ihE&gt;y can survtve,
This drastic change each fall .

~

rtsco

When• all of natllre·s l'le me nt s,
The cold, the s now, and rain.
Cannot rl:'aCh , or fol'l'£' thl:'m out ,
'1'11 warmth will comf' a~ ln.

1-lB. SUPERIOR VA((UIIM

,

PA(~D

SLICED BACON ••••••• .-.............~~~;.$1.89
(00K'S SMOKED 4 to 7 Lb. Avg.

U.S .D.A. INSPECTED HOLLY FARMS

.

Shelled
English Walnuts
Pound

CALLA ·HAMS ••••••••••••• ~~ ••••••••••• !~~.... 89&lt;
.

Mixed Fryer
Parts
Pound

88

SMITHFIELD

HOMEMADE

lb

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••;. $1.2 9
LIMIT 4 PLEASE
Ill (1. California

MA,RGARIINE .................:....... 79t ORANGES~...................6 I Qt~c II.;
Hol'fmt1n' s Super Sharp

Hubbard's Greenhouse
Now Op1n F.,

(HEESE ................!~: S2

300 SHEETS PER ROLL

Chflltlfl•l $UIDII
CHECK PRESENTED- The Junior Modem Woodmen or America
presented a check for $125.30 along with a check In the saq1e. amount
from the home olflce of· Modern Woodmen, Rock WWld, m. to the
Pomeroy Emercency Squad. The juniors canied out projects In the
matching fund program of Modem Woodmen to raise the money. Ethel
Hart, junior director, presented the check to Cindy llllrtenbach as AI
Seth, left, and Steve Hanenbacb, looked on. Mrs. Hartenbach spoke
briefly on the work of the squad and extended appreciation from the unit
for the contribution.

WANTED:
BANK STOCKS

Poimottias • PoHod &amp; Hanging llodcots,
Foliage Plants • Potted &amp; Hanging lm·
keto, Christmas Cactus, AfrkM Violtls,
(hristmai 'lrttt. Wreaths, GraYO llankots, Canoli .. ..........t.. Homo....
Applt Iutter &amp; ollw novelties.
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sun . 1 to 5
PHONE 992-5776

FIRST SCIOTO
41t ARCADIA

Portraits make wonderful Christmas
gifts for those you love.
2(8xl0$), 3(5x7s.),
.~

COIUMIUS, OH. 43202 .
(6141261-7DU

15 wallets only. . .

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
PIZZA BURGER

S1.09
WITH FillS.••$ 1.59
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAUEY
"-"'Y·,._, Bridge"
PH. 992-2556

....

l

$IZ 9

• :J

Total Package

95e Deposit ·

.._..

s
\

~
~
tl

,

--------~------

1-LB. TASTY BIRD FRYING

,,

CHICKEN LIVERS ............................(.•r.n•..••••••• o

c

CHICKEN DINNER ......................... ~~!... S3.69
I-LB. ROLL RUDY FARM

'19 OZ. UMPIELL'S CHUNKY SIRLOIN

Nov. 21-Dec. 2
Wed.·Sutl.

Photogrephy Houre:
Wed. &amp; Sat. 10-1. 2-6

. • .&lt;·=....':;·.

151f• OZ. DEL MONTE

'

Tues. ~

Frida~

10·1.

2-.30, 6-7:30
Sunday 1·5

; ·~ . .:.·~ .-:~.

'- ·

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE ••••••••••• ~~.~ •••••• 69&lt;

IN OIL OR WATER

27 OZ. DEL MONTE

SPINACH ....................... ~~.~~. 2/S1.79

Kroger 2%.

16 OZ. VAN CAMP

PORK &amp; BEANS ...................~~.'!'. 2/ 89&lt;
,

-.

FROSTED FLAKES .................~~.~ •• $1.6 9
5 OZ. ARMOUII

VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••••••••~~~~ •• 2 f$1.1 5

UIIIEIWOOII Olunlcy Chidletl. RCICBI lief,, Dnied Ham

SPREAD ABLES ••••••• ~ •••~~!.~:~.~~'!!.2 fS1.69

.I

. .·.........
,J

PINEAPPLE JUICE ................~~.~ •• $1.39

15 OZ. KELLOGG'S
Photography Days

I'

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

46 OZ. DEL MONTE

INSTANT COFFEE .................~~! ... $3.89
16 OZ • .COFFEEMATE ..........~~!... $1.99

Pound

For

BURGER SOUP••••••••••••••••••••• ~~.~ •• $1.1 5

·

Bananas

4-Roll

2·LB. BANQUET FRIED

6 OZ. MAXWILL HOUSE

Golden Ripe

White Cloud
Bathroom Tissue

HOT SAUSAGE-.............................. ~~11. .. S1.89

There is still time
toget.those · •
. preCIOUS portraits.

We will pay lop prius for your bank slacks.
Wo have spt&lt;ialilod in this field for ovor 10
y~. Call collect far a quoit. Ask for Brad
Smith.

"At The End tl 1M
POMEIOY OH.

Collins and members were asked to
send letters to their reps:esentallves
In opposiUon io the bill

BOILED HAM ..... ~~:~~.d.~~·;:~!~:.~!~;.~~·. $1.99

&lt;:;au neil seat was settled by picking a
condy-covered peanut from a coffee
•
oon.
: Incumbent Forrest Bruner won
re-election Monday night when
Councilman David Bracken drew
the only brown piece of candy from
Win the coffee can.
The winning draw on only the
second round of peanut picking
meant defeat for businessman Bob
Lewis, who had lied Bruner in the .
Nov. 6 election with 253 votes In this
Josephine County city.
The city charter calls for lied
eleclions to be settled by drawing
lots in a method determined by the
City Council. The council decided to
settle it with candy.
Qry Recorder Bud Phillipp said
he 01iginally intended to buy jelly
beans, but noticed they varied too
greatly in size.

'

The Melp County l:b8Pter of the · , Olflcerl' reporti were 11wn, ·_ ·H IItorlclilSocletyPrelldentMar·
Ohio Geaeelotllcal Society took •
aloDi With reporta on etforti lielni · aaret P.arker a~ that a
atand qllnlt the Ohio HouM ol made toprete~VerecOrdlln aeveral mieroftlm reader .and film II now
Repleuntatlwl Blll3ll a~ueCI!It , caw\ty dttplrtJnenll. Lloyd Bl,ack- -available for._Uie In the - m~
meetlni held It theMelp M~ .n. wood ulred for volull.teerl to help Ubrary•.. Additional ·tum II ~
The blll, It wu explalDed, would copy and preeerve ~!'fll of the ·, orilered.
· .
·.
rille the COlt of certlfled cop1el of Sacred Heart- Catholic .Church. It ·
ElizAbeth Davis won the door
birthalld dNthrecordl to~llhdai!y wai voted to adOpt the propoul
priie. Jline~aave -~llon
probate record to $10. A letter from from the Hiltortcal SOciety to place . on llowtocomplleani:estlrcardsfor
the chapter was Sl!llt to Sen. Oakley .all books and 1'1\at~al . ln. the the file tridex for both coimty and .

The birds tha t seek the southern warmth ,
Have left long, long ago.
And as each day that pasSfS by,
Brtngs closer to a snow .

. CAVE JUNcriON. Ore. (API-

~

'

Will lie untouched through w1nter months,
Their looks, now a llthr same.

t\ tie vote in the election for a City

''\

.

Poet corner

An thPn. as If in world anew,
All things throughout the land .
Will blossom ,torth in wand array,
At thP stroke or th~;" Mastt&gt;r's Hand .
By Olen 0 . Harrison, :IYl'Ol C..old R idge
Road. Pomeroy.

'

green, nanowleaf evergreen, and
grouildcovers.
In the rouatlonal division there ' :
are classes for both indoor and : :
outdoor door decorations, wreathes, - ;
swags, aild wall hangings.
l
There are also classes for ~
decorated Christmas packages, ·using one or more recycled.· Items
either as a container or decoration,
and contrived !lowers. Special
exhibits of a non-competitive nature
InClude things from the Meigs
County Extensive · ~ce. decorations for the home ustog natulral
materials by Melanie Stethem,
chairman.
Judging will be held at 1 p.m. on
Saturday. The show Is open for
public viewing from 1 to 5 p.m. on
·Saturday, and from noon to 4 pm on
Sunday.

Genealogical
SOciety
meets

•. Ppmeroy~Middleport.' .Ohio .

IN THE DELl-BAKERY

French
Bread

Lowfat Milk

16-oz. loaves

.Gallon .

Chicken Of
The Sea Tuna
6.5-oz.

c

88
For

_,

c

•

TWIN PACK

BOUNTY TOWELS ................~~!-•• S1.23
\

�Wedne1dey, Nowmber 28, 18a4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Wedn111day, November 28, 1984

The Daily Sentinel-Page 1 1

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
8

PHONE 992-2156

12

Public Sale
It Auction

OrIIICHrtii
...........- - -·
-.GIIIo411tt

Situation•
Wanted

31

Settled tody to live In ond

help eJwre expenMI. Call
448·8422 .

Home• for Sale

By OW- 3 Of 4 br hou...
•uck ttovo, Iorge ~. I
yNrt l otd. 178,000. 304·
871-e3615 .

Will core for old•rly In our

1-C....tll\eoob !folollft--1

,_
. .,__,·~"'-...• 1
2.1oo._
• . tu.....
I ·H"""'"'do

..........
,,'1 .·.._

··-loll
• Awctkil

JlohellltlliMIII .....Inl

J.l ·"-•1• •••

U
·MoN•-•'"''"''
,,.,.,_,......
'

-

U - IIIIMfii..Wirl ..

• .• ..., .... . w

)6-~ ......... .

2 ........... . ..... ~

,,...... .......

. ,. " ...... ... 11 ..1

U -M-W......I•II..,o

1:1--·-·

•:t-'•-hlr-1
U -A - - tlor fllfll

tt.Jiooje,fV•c•ll.,oio
17·M I I C - 11-WOflll&lt;lla0. ,

·1-W•••••II•1-l.W._, 1ar II....

11 -lil_¥1 .... ...

14-h ol ..... ,........
11-IC~­

••., ....lo- Ro..,.,
41· 1tiKO tar llonl

NonCEOFA~NTMENT

OF FIDUCI'ARY

_Blizzard hatters Northwest;
rains hit Mississippi Valley
By Associated Press
, A Pacific blizzard packing Ill mph
. Winds barged east today after
dwnplng up to 16 Inches of snow,
!mocking out powerto35,[1X)homes,
,. stranding scores of Oregon hunters,
. closing Interstate highways and
: sending san Francisco skyscrapers
. swaying.
, Thrre people died in traffic
,.accidents Tuesday blameq on the
weather.
. . Blizzard and near-blizzard condi·
· tions gripped the mountains of
· Northern California, Washington
and Oregon for up to 18 hours on
TUesday, but the storm was
,: trudging east today, aiming at
Wyoming, ldabo, Utah and Colo·
rado, said Paul Flke, a meteorolo~·glst with t he Na tiona! Severe Storms
. Forecast Center In Kansas City, Mo.
The storm has "still got quite a bit
'of punch left," Fike said early today.
."There's still some good snowfall."
Norden, Calif .. had a foot of snow
on the ground today, and 3 inches
:had fallen at Kalispell, Mont. On
Tuesday, 10 Inches fellln24 hours at
·Meacham In northeast Oregon. Up

~-Tax

to 16 Inches was reported In the
Oregon and Washington Cascades.
A foot fell on California's Mount
Shasta.
Another storm dwnped 4 Inches of
snow at Hibbing, Minn. , by early
today, Fike said. The warm air
moving In front of that storm
brought rain to Tennessee, Ala·
bama, Georgia and Florida, Flke
said.
Seven Arkansas rivers were
above flood levels in places, and
much of the state has received twice
the normal November rainfall.
Rains abated early today, and
officials dispatched crews to barr!·
cade flooded roads, clear debris and
assess damage.
In the drought-plagued Hawallan
Islands, squalls dumped as much as
151nches of rain In 12 hours TUesday,
causing $1.2 million In damage on
Ohau, the most populous Island.
As many as 100 hunters were
believed stranded In northeast
Oregon, but none was thought to be
lost or in.danger Tuesday night , said
Maryanne May, a Umatilla County
sheriff's deputy. Authorities hoped

to get them to safety today, she said.
In San Francisco, skyscrapers
swayed In winds that blew Windows
out of a highrise apartment building.
Gusts of nearly !l&gt; mph rattled
nearby Mission Peak.
Winds knocked out power to at
least 26,000 customers In Washington for several hours, and about9,000
others were without power In
Northern Califmnla for about an
hour TUesday.
Flke said the Pacific storm would
push east throughout the day, and
another storm lurking off the coast
could sweep ashore Thursday nlght.
At Yakima, Wash., .the 24-hour
snowfall of more than lllnches since
late Monday night broke a November record·set in 1921. Offlctais
reported more than 50 fender·
benders but no Injuries Tuesday.
The main east·west route through
Oregon, lnterstate84, was closed for
10% hours Tuesday between La
Grande and Baker, state Trooper
Bruce Stecher said. Hundreds of
trucks and tankers tined up at La
Grande while the highway was
closed, state pollee Lt. Kirk Wirick
said.

plan concerns mayors

INDIANAPOLIS lAP )- Urban
likely will avoid hasty
' judgment on the proposed overhaul
of the federal Income tax system,
; according to the president of the
. National League' of Cities, even
· though experts say the plan wUI
!llake it harder for local govern·
. ments to raise money.
• Some of the leaders. gathered
here for the league's 61st annual
'' conference, voiced concern Tues·
. &lt;jay about a proposal to tal&lt;e away
federal tax deductions for state and
local taxes.
.:" But league president George
' Latlmer; the Democratic m ayor of
St. Paul, Minn., sa id, "I don't think
: the League of Cities is going to be
taking a position at this session ... "
The organization's final policy·
111aking meeting today caps the
..·five-da y conference. · ·
: · The municipal leaders generally
·were reluctant to assail the tax
.le;~ders

..

7:S.c hroeder's
... LOUISVll..LE , Ky. (APl William Schroeder's eyes filled with
' "gratitude and hope" as his wifeand
children gently put their hands on
; his chest to feel the artificial heart
· that ha.• beat almost 300,lXXl times
since It was .lmplanted three days
:11go, Schroeder's doctors said.
"This Is the first twotothree days
in something we hope wUI be a year
or two years," Dr. Allan M. Lansing,
who assisted at Schroeder's me·
chanica! heart implant, said
Tuesday.
: "The thing I see In his (Schroed·
. • er's) voice and in his eyes Is
· ·gratitude and hope- gratitude that
he's had another chance, hope that
· : he's made It over the first hurdle,"
:said Lansing; chairman of the
·· Humana Heart Institute lnterna- .
· ilona!, where the surgery was
performed . .

· :·.~· Speaking for. the ·first lime since
Sunday's surgery atter a breathing
· ~ tube was removed Tuesday mornIng, Schroeder asked fora beer, and
Milwaukee radio station WKTisent
, . a case to the hOspital, o!!lclals said.
P" Schroeder might be allowe(l to
have a beer In tbe .next two to three
· days, said Lansing.
Atter taking Ice chips and chiar
. fluids, SChroeder spent some of the
· atlel'IIOOn eating grape Popslcles
' and vlsltlng,wltb his family, o!!tclals

proposals announced in Washington
Tuesday by the Treasury
Department.
Reagan administration officials
said the revamped tax structure,
which would eliminate many deductions presently allowed, would
result In Income tax payments
falling or holding steady for 78
percent of Individual taxpayers .
Discussions at this meeting focused heavily on the proposal to
eliminate federal tax writeoffs for
state and local income and on sales
and property taxes, except In cases
where the taxes were business
expenses.
Taking away the deductions
would make It harder for local
officials to raise money in the future,
said Jerry Mlller,executive director
of the National Association of State
Budget Officers, based In Washing· .
ton, D.C.
Suggesting that the deductions

make state and local taxes more
palatable to taxpayers, Mlller said
"people do tend to take their
frustrations out ... on the local and
state level, where they can vote."
Enid Beaumont, director of the
prtvate Academy for State and
Local Government, also based In
Washington, agreed, saying "my
guess Is that It (the loss of those
deductions) wlll affect the willing·
ness of people to pay (state and
local) taxes."
But Republican Mayor Jolm
Mercer of Sunnyvale, Calif., said "I
don't have any problem wJtb that,
asswnlng they reduce marginal
rates and simplify."
"The way you've got It now,
you've got the federal government
subsidizing state and local taxes,
and that's fine if you've got a federal
government wlth the surpluses to do
that," said Mercer.

11·"·-•o..•
TVIII . . IftUI-ft1
f~ · CI,

U ·A..,.,..
......... M••~WI"

......... ,.......

...,....... ....

-.

11 -Muoicoll,.••mt "'o

·-

~~

,,.,,., ..... ,..r .. ..

I J .......

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn TUesday
nlght In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, ••The Number~" was 993.
In the "Pick 4" game, the Winning
number was 8270.
The lottery reported earnings of
$981,655.5(! from wagertng on Its
dally game. Eamtngscarneonsales
of $1,161,554, while holders of
Winning tickets are entitled to share·

DeVries said he hoped Schroeder
could go home before (;'hrtstmas,
"but I think that's very optlmisticon
my part."
The wldow of Dr. Barney Clark,
the only other man to receive a
permanent mechanical heart,
called Hwnana spokesman George
Atkins to offer best wlshes to
Schroeder's wife, Margaret, and six
children, Atkins said.
Una LoyCiark"wantedMargaret
and the Schroeder family to know
that all the prayers and feellings of
the Clark famllywerewJth them and
that she feels a special kinship witli
Mrs. Schroeder," Atkins said.
H Schroeder's recovery continues
top~ smoothly, his dilctors
may begin on Friday to sustain him
for brief periods wlth an ll·poulld
portable heart drive unit that wou'ld
tree him trom the large, 323-poulld
Ulahdrtve that Is now pwnplng the
plastic heart at arateof75 beats per
minute.
HOSpital emergency power sys·
terns kept Schroeder's heart pumplngfor~totbreemlnuteswhellthe

hospital's llgllts flickered and power
· 'A(ellt 01,1t about 8: :a! TUesday ·
In the parlrn\Jtuel "Pick 4" game, mornlni.
"There was absolutely no time
sales totaled $160,00. Holders of
$179.~.50.

winning tickets are entitled to 45 when It was any threat," Lansing
·
percent, or $72,104. A winning $1 ·said.
The cause of the problem was not
straight ticket earns $6,168. A ·
!mown.
winning $1 boxed ticket eilms $257.

....

f:lnuljiPd pafiP' N ll 't'r tlu•

U -f•uc:h""l ...

Ju1IIJidnlf u•lt-,Jhmw r•rlumllf'• ...

n -v.... a•wo

u ..........,-

·•••",•......
NofO!"•
,.n ......
...,.........
"' ""''"~opo;,

On Novembe r 2 1. 1984. 1n
the Me1gs County Proba te
Court. Case No 24624. Edward Mcintosh. 114 25 E.
Loon Cou rt . Floral C1ty, Florida
32636 was appointed E)(ecu-

Mol.,

G1~11Go\l•1Y

,

u .c,..~.,, !""l~rMI'II

.... c-•u

UI-Gtl;p~o

112- M-...rl

-~
••-c-•
t•-·"'··..•· ,,.,_,..,_
U7- C::hr•'*•
,. _"'"'"'~

loil - Ar .... o;-1
171- WoiiWI

II ·H o r r t l l - - lo

.,......... to''"' .

12·1'1.................. ...

IJ·l
·- ·""'U ·l'lecorir: ol'• ~.tr-OioD~

U -t.!Yn ood
•o·•~

,,..""
II

•

SHOP LOCALLY

RENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522
"Wt Rut,, tm''

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIOII COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF JAMES R.
MILLER, SR., DECEASED
No. 241101 Doc:bt 12

Not1ce IS hereby ,giVen th at
on the 19th day of NovemQer
1984. Board of Trustees.
Letart Township, Me1gs
County. Oh1 0. the UnderSigned pet1 t1oner. f1l9:d a
oet1tron m the Court of
Common Pleas of Me1gs
County. Oh1o, be1ng Cause

c..

Ptge437

NonCE OF
APPOINTMENT .
OF RDICIARY
On Septomber 10. 1984. oh
Me1gs

thl'l

C0untv

Court, Case No 24.502. Ga&lt;

•• .ly r\ .I M1 i~N 'R1 2. Ct"\f·f:h, rtl
&lt;1!)6 J:O IN . !~; rl() fJO II&lt;I f!(1
e•~r.o f r•ll of lnP f:!S1Jte of Jai'TlP.~

' ) fl o )

R Mdl"!r . S1 decP.ased. Iale al
At ?. Chesh•re. Oh1o
Roher! E Sue~ .

Probate Judge
Bv: Lena K. Nessetu:tad

21

U-S VE
AU 0

St~·'-'60A!.
telllptlla.l•l•

E . Mai11W

POMEROY,O.

992·2259

OPEN DEC.
HOUSE
2, 1984
SUNDAY~

2:00 P.M. TO 5:00 P.M.

Scarlet
Hera would feel
at
Southern luxury i• the feeling of this stylish .
estate. This ,.Tara" has 26 acres of rolling
land. Ten spacious rooms! A modern day
I
Rhett Butler will appreciate the many un .que
features. A short carriage 'ride will take you
back in timel Come to our Open Houaa on
Sunday, December 2, 2:00·5 :00 p.m. Turn at
Pomeroy Elementary, follow signs.
1----~----~~----------l.

~---------------------I

CU r b I nflatlon II
1
.II
Pay Cash for
I
CIasslfleds and II
Save I I I
i
J

I

.
.
I
Wro -·~ vour own ad and
order by mall wim m1s 1
coupon. Cancet your ad by phone when you get .
1
results. Money not refundable.

Clerk

I
1

Surface M1n1ne Con trol and
Reclamat10n Act of 1977. 30
U S C et seq., the Columl)us
Fteld Ofhce. Office of Surface ~
Mm1ng hereby g1ves not1 ce of
ava1labrhty of Ftnd1ng of No
S19n•f• can t Impac t (FONSIJ ad dres.sulg env•ronmental assessmen tS {EAsl for development of
nllle abandoned m•ne land
PfOtec ts 1n the State of Oh1o.
The Stat8 of Oh 10 has prepared
and OSM has approved the EAs
on thesP. projec ts subm111ed by
the State m apphcat10n for Tnle
IV 11nanr.1 al assrstance u1 re ~ l a1m 1 ng and restormg lanrl and
wa ter rP.sources arlver sely af
lectP.rl by oas t mtn lllq Com pl ete co pl f)S o f 1t1e EAs ore
r:tvailabiP. from ' the Columbus
F1 e1n Olf •ce. Olf1ce ol S1•rl ace
Mu1111g. 2422 South Hamil ton
Roarl . ColumbtJS, Oh10 43232
The spec1f1c protec ts mcluderlm this act 1on are located ·
111 Me1gs Coumv. Oh•o The
Br• t kl es Pro1&lt;:c t. located w11hn1
t11e town of PomerOy. w1ll
conl! ol m1ne rlra1nane from an
unc1Arqro und f~trn · The Buck
Sh a1P. · p•orer.t. nlso located
w1th m th0. town of Pomerov. w1ll
rP.cla1m ,, n OJ ba ndoned mtne
opemnq The D'll Protoc't. Ia·
CiJ it,:d onr m iiP. north of PonlP. ·
rov . will recln,m three m'ne
o 0 emnqs The JAil SB€p Pro·
recrs. tor.n1mt nP.nr MmP.rsv1 fiP..
w'll con orol 0
iro on an
rthrlnri oned tJnderqrm•nc1 m1nP.
The Morns Seep. locJted tw o
m•IP.s 11orth o f Po me,oy. wtll
sP.al a m1nP. o(l~ n1nq . co ntrol
m1ne r lil lnaqe. and rec la1m a
I
cool rcfu sf! area The Pugevrlle ll
Protec l, located near PaRev,lle.
Will recl;um suriJcP. m1ne spo 1l
ThP. R11t l;1nd Pr OIP.C t. toaated
near Rntland. W&gt;ll rocl"'m ' "''
facA rn1 ne spotl Th e Shee ts
Pro1ec t. loca tm near Rutland .
w1ll co nl rtJI m1ne dralllllQA. The
Tanneh'll Sl'o Prowco. located
w1th1n the: town of Pomeroy, w1ll
recl.:um a l;111dsl1de anrl co ntrol

Bualneaa
Opportunity

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wirinc

needs; furn1ces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

To apply call:
WEDGCOR

o,..N.,,,y,,

~,,,,

;

Call Mr. Tate ,:
704-274-5965 :

Dealer

F•r• E••lt•••t

949-28o0

No Sunday Cells ·
l l l-rt

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Homes-EII1ensive
Remodelin1
· Insurance Wortt
Cult~m P~: Bldcs.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
UTIUTY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'•6' Up
·to 24'x36'

Insulated llol_llouses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Alu.minum &amp; Vinyl Sidinp
15 Years Experience

GREG ROUSH
PH . 992·7583

or 992·22!12
11- l ·tft

PULLINS

VAliNG

Plus:

' AI" -Tr••••lttlo•

MET. IIOWN 12 Only)
CH~~~~Ls~\Rf":l .

AT$599

t7. - - - - - -

lli.

or 992-7121

3-24-lh;

CONTRACTING
•DOZER • BACKHOE

•RECLAMATION WORK
•otL FIELD SERVICES
•ouMP TRUCK SERVICE
•CONCRETE WORK
•cuSTOM BUILT HOMES
•wATER, GAS lo
OIL LINES

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201 3-IS·

THANKS

to the busi; • who
hcMprewiou;lyplaced
an ad in the SOuthern
Hip Schaal Yetl'boak.
Any business or patrons who would
like to place an ad,
contact Donnie Dud·
ding at 949-260D.

19.

IONDIIWooD::

21 •
22.
23.

STOVES

---"-:--

DIIICTIONS,
.
6 Mila lilow Gal~
pallt; Crou lacc..n
Crk. lrldge, Turn lillit
on lear luilld. FOlloW

25, - - - - - -

26. _ _ _ __

Sadly mltlltl
Hit Fa..Uy aJNI Friinth

Signs.

Real ElUte

.

1..........;"-----11-12-11110.

Real Estate General
LAFF·A·DI\Y

TEAFORD rl]

W.

216 E . 2nd St.

Phone
1 ·(61 41-992-3325

NEW LISTiNG - Almost
new 7 rm. home, 2story with
Ig. deck on one acre near Po·
meroy .

.M
'
. I!G
~ HE£·· .
.. "R,al~ · ' Phone 742·3171

NEW LISTING- 15 acres ol
vacant land . Lebanon Town·
ship.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Good used relricerators,
washers. dryers. cas and
electric ranres and TV sets.
OPEN I TO~

Caunty Appliance, Inc.

OLIVE TOWNSHIP - Your
choice of a 3 BR home with
vinyl siding at $18,500 or
the 3 BRs, furnace &amp; wood
stove with vinyl siding, tor
$20,000.
RACINE -

·

like to inlroduce you to

lower Monthly Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

mo.

Rf/~~'IER

Georgoo Crook Rd.
61.4 ·446-0294.

326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
BoK,

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT
10·8-tlc

"CUT OUT
U~E"

KEN'S

Club every Sunday, 1 :00
p.m. Factory chocked guns
only.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

RUTLAND - Price reduced
25% on this 3 BR home. A
good buy at $20,000.
MIDDLEPORT - New un·
finished 2 BR home. Good
construction, owner !inane·
ing. $18,000.
THREE TRAILERS - Good 2
BR edge of Pomeroy on one
acre. $15,000. Near T.P. is this
2 8R with 2 additions on one
acre &amp; bldi lor $14,000. Stewart area is this 2 BRand 3.95

. HEMLOCK GR. - Mobile
home with 2 additional rms.
Gas lurance, wood burner on
2.$ acres. Asltln11 $25,000.
;/t &gt;tl' ."II&lt;/

I h •. ult Jl r,,

ft '.' •.

614 -992-

products. Contact Oaby
Martin-61 4·992·7022 .

6:30 P.M.

Deer heade mOunted, qual.ity and satisfaction guaran·

teed. Call Stewart'a Taxidermy ot 814-742-3006 .
No hunting or trnpa11ing,
day or night. on Chorteo E.
Yost Farms.

WANTED
RAW
PINE POSTS
C. V. POSTS

Will paint car or truck and do
minor body worlc. f210.00.

All work guaranteed . Call
614-992 -6846.

PARTS •nd SERVICE

.

writt~n per·
mission only. MIJline Diddle
Sellers and Lillian Proffitt.

Craft sale at Cheshire -Kyger
Ele•n .• Sat. December 1

PH. 667-6715

from 10:0DAM to 6 :00PM.

8:00 to 5:30

Watson Grove Rd. off Rt.
564 in Cheshire sponsored

Monday thru Friday

by P.T.O.

ll · !-1 mo.

Poatively no trespassing on
the Pantasota Property, violators will be proaicuted.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

ABSOLUTELY no hunting or

traapa11ing on JoeWhitright
property on Route 2. Violetera will be prosecuted.

4

Slttt , .... lei..
•• D•lf

Mixed puppies to give away .
Coli 446 - 9301
4:30pm.

$flow
Nov. 5-Dec. 8
Man.-Fri. 9-9

Sat. 9-5: Sun. 1-5
Kim Nelson

992-2903
Ruth Ann J lor

good hom.o . Call 446-9346 .

4f

3 puppioo Chihuahua . Call
44e.0528 .
Mole Engtioh Shoop dog, 1
yr. old. Call 446-2687 .

•ttlaxlng

.....,.r·Oultloor UH

Part Siameae mother cat·
,good mouaer.Call 614 -

•Y•r l01nd PlttKure
..Special lnr rodut'l ''''!'

669·4705 .

Prirf'll•·

Two puppies one female and

BUCKWOOD
HOME SPAS
r-rey, OH.
can 91S-31DS

one mota . Call after &amp;PM ot
614-992-2779 .

Sm111 dog . 1 Y2 year old .
Loves to run rabbits but gun
ohy. Call 814 · 742-2666 .

ll /12/ 1 mo.

992-356

~
%
z

-

Smell pupo, 2 montho old,
mlxod breed. 304·875·
7441 .

Computerized Hearifll Air Selection
Swim Molds • lnterprelifll Services

3 pupa, a ix weeks. mixed
breed, 814-446·0069 .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

6 Lost end Found

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

·'·Found:

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

ln.

•7o
no

IJ:~:............. . . . .

Employ ment

Call 614-992-9975 or 992·
2873 .

National company offers
chance to get ir1 0r1 ground
floor opportunity . We're offer !ng generous commissions. bonuses . and an opportunity for management
positions. Must be 18 years
old. self motivated. neat
ippeerance. courteous. and
have Own transportion. Our
representive will be at the
Ohio University Inn , 331
Richland Ave .. Athena, Ohio
to take applications between
ttle hours of 8 :00 am and
11 :00 am on Thursday Nov .
29 , 1984. No phone calls
accepted at O.U. Inn.

vootmont. Coli AC 304 -824·
7828 or 824 -3552 .

S 1: r v 11:es

Help Wanted

Tote. 704·274-5965 .

Experienced baas player for
well established CoUntry·
Rock bond . Cott 614 -246 ·
9316 or 614-245 -5018 .

Can you travel7 Immediate
openings for men and
women •t least 18. prefer
single to usi.t on a national
travel publishers incentive
program . No experience necessary , expanses ad vanced , transportation provided It no cost. Must be
free to travel the entire USA
jrandom itineraryl and ltlrt
at once! No phone calls!
Ideal for recent high school
grads! See Mr. Weaver

Clr ftndtn ..... ............. &amp;O
79-10 •••t•nr
Clr ftndtn .................. 60
11-14 Escori·Cynx
Ftncltn ............... ......... 49
Olllll· Hori•on 2 dr. or
4 dr. ft!ldtrs ................ 75

Public Sale
It Auction

1973 Granville12x60 2 bdr.
mob ile home . Includes
wah18r &amp; dryer and large
window air conditioner, excel.lent conditic;m . Call 4484361 or 446-4306 or 4461171 .
1972 12X60 Vintage, good

cond .. 2 bdr .. 1 Yz bath. new
furnace , firepl1ce with
blower. good carpet. stove.
refrig., waaher, dryer, window air cond .. drapes. some
furniture , outside building,
Lot 97 Ouoil C,_ok. Cotl
445·6592 or 246 -9592.
1971 2 bdr .. 12x66, cloon,

good cond ., new carp,t,
stove Ia refrig . $4,900. Call
446-8038 .

14x85 2. bdr .. frt den. axe .
cond .. gas heat; will "ccept ·
any reuonable offer . Call
614 ·446·0175 .
19B2 Happy House. 14x66 .

G11 halt, bay window , large
master bedroom. furnished .
Excellent condition. Priced
upon inspection . Call 614 ·

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS -Refinance

to low fi:w:ed rate . Use equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgage
3061 .

Co ..

614 · 592 -

Henderson St .. $6500.
Hendortll,ll , WV. 304-6756939 .

50x12. new cerpet a'nd
exterior door. can be seen K
&amp; K Mobile Homes. Inc .
Used mobile home . 2 bedrooms, all new carpet .
drapes . furnace . hot wet.,
tonk. 304-676-3334 .

23

Professional
Services

33

Farms for Sale

Wanted : small acreage for
home site. Close to pavttd
road . Rio Grande · G~IIipolie

Friday : 9 :00 - 12 : 00 and
2:00-4 :30 at William Ann

niola. 614·742 · 295t .

U-Build -it . 3 bdr . Wildernns
Home Kit . $6,995. New

Beat Western Motel . Galli-·

Unwanted facial or body
hair? Permanent , painle11
removal by European Electronic Oepilator. Mary is
certified in this new computerized digital system . Call

model open . Call 1-6t4886 -731t .

Application I are being taken
for part time grocery clerks.
Must be able to work days or
evenings. We are looking for
experienced peop18 only.
Applications will be taken at
Vaughan 's Cardinal in Mid·
dleport on Nov. 26 , 27, and
28 or call Mr . Dennis
Hockman at 992-3471 for
an appointment.

today 614-992· 6720. Top
of 1ha Stairs , full service

salon .
- - - - - - - -· lc Deer heads mounted. Quality mounts. Over 25 years
experience . Ealt of Rutland

PAIR . Redu ced rates limited
time only. Ward 's Keyboard.

9o00 to 11 :00 and 2 :00 to
4:00.

304 - 675 -6500
3824 .

237 . Equal Employment
Opportunity .
Join the West Virginia Nationit Guard . Receive a

PIANO TUNING AND RE·

Real
31

or 675 '

Estale

Homes for Sale

3 bdr. large Livingroom,
pool, t ac., storage buildings, anume 9 1/z% loan . Will
help finance balance. Call
446-7636.

nefits. Colt 304-675-3960
or 1-800-642 -3619.

Minimum
Help

ex~rience.

Wonted.

port

Call

Sollll Coli 614-992·694t .

5548 .

loi for sale in Mercerville, 3
trailer hookupa, electric. ru-ral water , septic taiik ,
f8,000 . Call
6618 .

822, 500 . Call
6296 .

Lot in CleaNiew Estatea: 6
mi. below Gallipolis. under-

614-246-

Owner moving . Must eell
modfied A frame. 15 acraa.

TEXAS

and wood burner. Corning
top oven and aide by iide ref.

Ft. Wonh. Tx. 76101 .

F-19 , Owner wants to sell
and has redu ced the price on
30 acres on Tribble Road .
5 .5 miles fro m State Rt . 62;
feir house, some good bot ·
tom land I Barnard Hill Property \. Town &amp; Country Real
Estate, broker, 304-675 -

Remodeled 2 bedroom vi·
nyted home, carpeted, 2
acres. 1224 pound tobacco
allotment, city achools,

fully cerpoted with fireplace

needs matur. perion for
short trips surrounding Point
Pleasant . Contact customers. We train . Write K. 0 .
Oickar.on, Pres., Southw·
eatem Petroleum . Box 789.

roy ,Ohio 1614)992-6069 .,

selll And we mean priced to

limo

COMPANY

122 acre farm, Chmer
Township. 'h of minereta
previously sold . Offers wiH
be accepted at the law office
of I. Carson Crow.Pome-

Middleport Homo. Priced to

711 . Gtltipolit Forry, W . Vo.
26515 .
OIL

37 acre farm on Gallie
Cou nty Road 218 . 8 room
house , lend, bam, out bUild·
ing and large tobacco ba...
$20 ,000 cash or can 1MJ
bought on land contract.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

monthly peychack. U5.0DO

life insurance, educational
opportunities. retirement
pay, other outatanding be-

ship . Colt 614-373-0456 .

_..;_~-

Cook .flash and chef needed

Xray Technician wanted :
Male or female part time
position. Send resume to
Veterans Memorial Hospite1,115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy . Ohio 45769 .

200 acre farm for sale . Will
subdivide. Rutland Town-

on Rt. 124 . Coli 614 ·742· Coli 614-742 ·2110 .
2178 .
._ _ _ _ _ _

immediately . Apply at Ohio
Job Services Union · Ave,Pomeroy on Rt . 7 . Between

61 3· 663-9847.

8

7132.

area . Call 614 ·245 -6239 .

11 E. 2nd St. Pomeroy. Con
be picked up et Tooford
Realty.

FOUND AT BOWINCALS
boye locket , 304 -e76.·
7112.

Ftllden ........................ 62

7HZ Chtvtlle

1971 Torch 1,ix65 2 bdr ..

unfurnished . Call 446-

Piano Tuning and Repair .
Brunicardi Music Co., 4460687. Twentieth year of
quality service . lane Da·

TRUCK DRIVERS needed

Loot on Send Hill Rd. Vinyl
top lot Hortoy Dovldeon golf
Clrl. 304-6711· 3901 .

for Sale

· Priced to sell . stock. Jicenae
and equipment, prime loca- 742 -2979 ohor 7 :00 or
tion. inquire I &amp; J Carryout . work 614 - 992 -33 45 .
Tueeday through Sunday , D.Wober .
noon to 6 p.m . Located 50
Government jObs . $16,559· ft . south railroad tressel .
1 966 Mor!e«e 12x60, 3
860,553-yeer. Now hiring . Kanauga . Ohio .
bedroom . central air. excelYour area. Call 805 -687·
lent condition. Located On
6000, e&gt;t. R-4562.
Own your own J ea n · nice lot jl!at outside MiddteSportsweer , ladies bou ·
Sales Manager needed for tique, or children 's store. port. •6600.00. lncludot 1
year lot rent free . Call
Molgo Co . Memory
National Brands . •15,900.
Gardens . Salary plus com- includes 89. 176 inventory, 614.· 992· 7364 evoningt ..
mission. We train &amp; furnish fixtures . training, accessoleads. Sand reaume to P.O. ries and more . Call now I Mr. Must sell, '74 Kirkwood
trailer. see to appreci•ta.
box 729 . Athena, Oh 45701

11

Pair of children•
glanea near Teaford Realty,

D-50 DOIICt Tr.

UB,OOO . Colt

614· 843 ·

6384 evening i for Sunday
eppc.

614·2 56 -

. ground utilities. restricted ,
for sale or trade. owfter
financing . Call 446-3485 .

Small building or mobile
home lot . Madison Town·
ship, Thurmon. Ohio . ·Ap.
pro• 130x50. County water
t ap . 304·676-3000.

Priced reduced total alec.
centrel air. new wood
burner, small alec. bHI, well
to wall cerpet, 3 br brick,
large garege. wood ehed.

Renlal s

r

. ......

c~ :u~~

Loon Fl• Morhot open doi·
toy 9 :00 to
••cept
Thundoy. We b'uy uoed

e'oa

F1,.
91
69.95
7Z.SO Jlodct Tr.
79-12 Chtvtllt Grllts·........ 31
fenders ...................... U5
fonllllnpr Grills ...... ...... 75
.fonllltll Chevy Tell lites

WHAUY'S AUTO PAITS

Tavern in Middleport for
sale. 0 ~ 1 . 0 - 2 , D - 3 license.

Own your own busineu . Be
Your Own Boll . Potential
income great. Sales experience would be helpful but
not necessery. Modest in·

secretary, Mnd resume, box

8-13 lfn
73-10 C~tVY Tr .
ftnders .. .....................
11-14 Chevy tr.
Ftftdtrs ......................
5-10-$15 Clltvy
ftndtrs.. .................... .. IO
73-79 fonl Tr.
ftftdtn .., ..................... 59
10-14 Fonl Tr.
ftndtrs .............,... .. ... llO

ingo end Sundoyo 614-B86·
8429 .

Phone 614-992-2104 axt .

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

i!

alter

AKC Reg. Airdolo 1o •;, AKC

Family Gift

*AHortlolllt
•rortalllt
*Thtrapeu4ic

2 Mills out flatwot4s ld.
Olf St. lt. 7

a
z

Giyeawav

Reg. Lab., all shots, to a

CO./lilt,, C'lff

19401. Alto postcards . Coli
614· 245-944B.

polit, Oh. Room 23 .

CHESTER-985·3307
Perfe~t

Kid. Cot!

or call 614 -692-6161 .

Hunting with

Plains, OH.

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

All Meba

.

.

ATTENTION HUNTERS :

10/4/tlc

•Washll'l •Diahwashara
•Rangel
· •Refrigerators
•Dryers •FrHJers

Wanted to buy : White girt
Cabbage Patch
614· 992-6181 .

upon death. We offer a wide
variety of inauranca, IRA 's
and tax •haltered annuity

Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns

91S-SS61

5788 .

panies to keep your saving&amp;,

SAT. NIGHT

Tuppers

1 9BO or 1981 model Gen-

eral Motors automobile. One
owner preferred . Call 992·

Some life int!Jrance policies

EVERY

Only

llghtt, night lightt . George
Buckloy, phono 614 -664476.1,houra 12-9PM dailey.

allow the insurance com·

lashan luiltling

•GIBSON R£FRIGERArOR
We N111 AF1ll Tl••

one acre lot. Want offer.
POMEROY - One fine
home, two story, 3 8Rs, fur·
nace. Need offer.

or catt

Quilts, quitts, quilts (before

HAVE · YOUR LIFE INSU·
•RANCE POLICIES RE·
VIEWED AND UPDATED.

•ZENITH
.SYLVANIA
•SPUD QU££N LAUNDRY

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Coli

Oun shoot at Racine Gun

Service
Call 614·992-6737

GUN SHOOT

We can repair and re·
care radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. Wealso
repair Gas Tanks.

,,,,,

Cleaner, one half mile Up

Small 3 bedroom hou•.
211 1 Uncoln Ava. will trade
304-676· 2749.

NEW AND USED t,IOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST , GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36 . PHONE 614· 4411·
7274.

chised dealer pre -opening
uta . Acce11oriea foFShop amith avail111ble . Chriatmas
ordera due November 28.
Call Bob. collect at the
Woodworkers Shed even-

BUYING RAW FURS. Beef

SWEEPER and sewing ma ·
chine repair, pans, and
supplies.
• Pick up and
delivery , Davia Vacuum

304 · 773·

5 -N - 1 WOODWORKING
MULTI -TOOL ; New Iron ·

and .D eer Hides. Ginseng and
yellow root . Selling trapping supplies. Wheat

3 Announcements

£nc1Ce· A·CII, the modem way
to drive the vehicle of your
choice.
No Down Payment

Older 4 BR.

IICJeS

L. "Bud"
8rolier·Auctlon
Cheryl Lt1111tr. · •t
. 'Mtilt County Anoci•t• '· ·

1112611

Needs restoring, excellent

extra, wmr lap lor 2nd
trailer, just $10,500.

9••rel

992-3345

FOI FU1UIE

Annuunr.emcnl s

for hstlf

or

6271111111 Aw.
Gallipolis
446· 1699

NO MOIHY DOWN:
900."-AI~
' '

&amp; fwoiluro,

WHdiog .... GrMualion Ita· .
tiaft.Jy, .....". Signs, ....
lotr St.,pt, lusinott foriM,
Copy Stnkts, ftc.
2551111 St. W u II I
104 "rtt 1y Av• .._..,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

~H. 992-5682

.WOOD &amp;
COAL
STOVES

Wlm 11 Only)
lUI 11 Onlyl

W

~'d

1·1 3·th:

Real Estate '

IN REMEMIRANCE OF

I"'IPiits

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

$26 .000 .00 .
5474.

32 Mobile Homes

Middleport, Oh. 614-992·
3478 .

Middleport, Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

J&amp;F

446-2062

NeW underground home.
1,200 sq ft. 3 acres.

to und m()ney through the
mail until you have investigated the offering.

Buying daily gold, silver
colne, rings. jewel.rv. ater1ing
ware, old coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ava.

11·8·tfc

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

Business
Opportun ity

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo, Iron,

48769
7760.

Phone

Certified Chimney Sweep

21

Call 446 · 3449.

wood, cupboerda. cheira .
chests. baskets. dishes,
atone jera. entiqull. gold
end sliver . Write-M . D.
Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio

•complete Chimney Cleaning
*Certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repai f
•Experienced and Insured

Roy Bickle

10·6·111:

1ft AI Vw,.,

304-676-6648.

! NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO . recommondt
that yo~ do buaine•• with
people you know, and NOT

Collector paying CBih for
guns, knivee, coins, Nni
items or any related Items.

446-2062

1110x120; , _

Recontty romod.,od. Good

Fi na nm l

Raw Fur. Top prices paid .

Care

Lot

financing available. !Roy
Taylor property,. Town 6
Country ~eal Estate, broker.

Lok• Jockoon Fin lo Fur. Oak
Hill, Oh . 614-8B2-744B.

Chimney

Sires Start From 12'd6'

Roofin~ork

GARAGE
Rl. 124,Pomtroy Ohio

In Memoriam

Thelecah rll1el ,
include discount

35.

11-5·11110.

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
You Were Going To Call Us?

"Beautiful, Cuatom
Built Garages" .

Roger Hysell

. Own your own -n~
Sportswear, lacliesi ·
Boutique, or Chiii
dren's Store. No~
tional brands: E.,nt(
Santa Cruz, E-Z:
StrHt, Zena, lzOti;
Ltvi, Jordacht, UHa
Ann', Evan Picone~
Etc. $15,900 in.:
ch..s $9,175 ~
ginning inVIIItory,;
store fixtures, in-:
store training, Qir-;
fare for buying .trip,:
store supplits, anti:
much mere.
· :
!IIH .

1111 28. 1tc

2

304-675·6276

Ph. 614-843-5191

Call for free siding estimates,~ 949-2801 or

9439 .

Wonted to buy Utod coal lo
ture. 441· 3159, 3rd. 1o
Olive St., Gollipotie. Oh.

tell .

septic tank; public wner; 3
home. have experience. Uve bedrooms; fud baNment.
Inside city limite . Cell 4•6- detatch.d garage. end ahop.

wood hMtara. Swain Furrli-

A.A.A.

SIDING CO.

I·J·tt.

BUSINESS . '
OPPORTUNITY:

~~~~~~iJQC from an undP.rQroun~

Authorized John Dtlfe,
New Holland, Bush Hog
firm Equipment ·

P1rt1 &amp; Stl'flee

303-759-3200
Ext. 2407.

'•'""G"

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO .

PH ,

heine, Oh.

BISSELL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

USE FREE STANDING
OR FIREPlACE IGEII1'
" Choice of 5 Colors .

34.

mo.

. SIDINO

JN COLOR

33.

11/ 1211

Vinyl It .Aluminum

BOGGS

Open Steel Building
Dealership, high potential profits avail- ·
able, part-time or
full time in your ·
area.

Who Dlpalllllllis lift
On Nov. 21. 1913

32.
______
lt. -

*Backhoe
•o,.. Truck
*Stptk Systems
•coal &amp; Limtlt•aondlll &amp; licensed
Ph- 742-2225
or 742-2167

1111/ tfn

Call 742 -~195
Or 992-5875

"FarmerBusiness Man"

OSWELL IOddl
DURHAM

27.
21.
29. _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ __

CONSlRUCTION

Will do bebyaitting in my

l!Ml ID.

·R('staorant

Oflict

Pursuant to T1t!e IV of the

24 •. -

A.M.

Public Notice
OFFICIAL NOTICE

)Wanted
)For Sale
)Announcement
)For Rent

· I iv~&gt; r n tf'rt;~lnmt'fl l
· F rce H , B ,O,
-kilcflenetll!l
· H Hour Swltchbo.arcl

Probate

111114.2 1. 28. 3tc

Jim Mink Chov.· Oido tnc.
8Ht Gone Johneon ·
441·3&amp;72

11-21· 1!110.

Public Notice

111 1 28. 1tc

I
1
I
1

CIHn UHd Clrl.

CAROLYN Mc&lt;OY

y--.. .

NOTICE OF RUNG
OF PETITION FOR
TRANSFER OF FUNDS

Real Estate General

IM- Lor111

,...... 4-Mo,.._l

No 84-CV·3 13 on the

By ahopplnaln your home al'llll you ..,. on
pa, !he - r and t~r on your c.r and avoid
the hlzlrdl of hl&amp;hway end freeway
travelln1. It paya to ahop where you live!

Addq~---------------

13'1- W...

· Wa INIY cath for .late mqdel

13 .00
Ill 11 11 _ . , ..
U,. tn..,Woro ,
1 • .oo
tlllaliWGIIfl . llo ..
.,,, 17,00 •

Docket of sa1d Cour t. ask.1ng
that s 8.000 00 be transferred
flam the Genera l Fund to the
Road nnd Br1dge Fund as
provtded by law. tor the
reasons set for!h 1n sa1d
Pet 11t0n . and that scud peu!l on
w1!1 be fa• hearu1g on the 5 th
day of De cember. 1984
Don R. Hdl.
Walter H .Roush
Harry C Hill.
Trustees.
Lel&lt;l •l Township.
Me1qs County, OhtO

COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!

Name

1.:1- ~\lt··

acre. · Arbuckle . 304-4881800.

R-82 M ..on. - - hot
red.,.ced price and •nxk»ua to

Wented To Buy

171 - ---~

711- ......

IU- twN"'-

Public Notice

11 1)2 8: 1121512 . 3tc '

9

171 - fll . .... _ ,

.,,,,,,_.. .OM•-..
flo••

lf.u.,~'"""

tor of the estat e of H.arne t M .
Spencer. deceased . · la te of
1608 Nye Aven ue. Pomeroy,
OHio 45769.
Robert E Bu d
Probate Judge/C lerk

.. _......

AOMCDoltlo.

147- UoWI141..- ~Hi ...

U7- c...-

18 Wanted to Do

....... c . .. wv .

1---- -- - - - - - - - - 1

n .a...... "4 ..••"11
......w.........

Rt&lt;~• ~¥'"'•"'

Public Notice

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Joan Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985·4466

c......,

.l.roo CridellA

211 - G""' ... oiat.

,~ .........

eyes filled with hope
said. A hospital sta te.m~nt TUesday
night said Schroeder remained In
critical condition and was "somewhat tired front all of today's
activities" but remained stable.
Schroeder's blood pressure
climbed slightly above normal
Tuesday and was controlled with
nitroglycerine, a standard treatment, Lansing sald.The development posed no threat and had been
expected because Schroeder suffered from high blood pressure
before surgery, he said.
Implant surgeon Dr. Wtlllam C.

,,........ "'

Al ·, t rL .. ~

Public Notice

compiiiiJ' coinmlssloned .nationally lmown WJI!ercolorl&amp;t Dean MltclleD to create the painting wblcll
would relle&lt;lt the growth, optimism and otrenglh of
Dlaffil)lldSavlngsandLoan.HeadquarterslnFlndlay,
Diamond Savings and Loan operates til ofllces In 2$
communities throughout Ohio.

~­

II•IIIMI'IIII\Ipplln

• • . l ... , ... ' """.
'l'-YM&lt;I . . ~(,.Jdin oll¥oncol

PRm!ENTED - To mark the recent mlleslooe of
Diamond Savings and Loan Co. ofreacltlngtheiJIIIJon
dollar mark In assets, Mrs. Geri Wallm, branch
mailager of Diamond Saving and Loan in Pomeroy,
• pnisenled this beauttfully frarnedpalntlngtoPomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday afternoon. The

Ot!Nol~lllll'

home, man and women. 3 br, dining, TV. utility
LPN core given. Colt 114· rooma. 111J baitha. window
air cond., wood burner. "
992-7314.

furniture

and appliances;

olto Hll

lorg• ltomo on

conlisrnment. Stop in or call
304·4118·111 72 .

9· 13-ttn

'

Two openlngo. fill yHrt of
oge or olde1 , Light typing.
general offlcewortc . Potltlon

goverened by proverty In·
como guldo lin... Apply In
person at Point Plaesant Job
Service, 226 Sixth 51, Point
Pleoeont. W. Vo.

•r

Gottlpollo Ferry. 304·675·
18111 .

Two bedroom, recently rem- ·
odelod, forced •lr hoot, 102
High 9treet . Phone 3048715-2515 oher 11:00 P.M .

41

Houses for Rent

•Houoe for

rent. Coli 304675 -7263 6711-6104 or
676· 6386 .

�..
.'

12 The
•1 · Hounl for

They'll Do It Every Time

R•nt

151

'
HOUH for rent In 'M..aervAio

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
~qfl, ohelr, rookaf. ono·
men, 3 tebleo, (olllrl helvyl,
IIIII. lofl, oholr end 1ov.- t, 1271. lofll! and oholrt
prloed from 12811. to 18111.
i'ablao. 1110 and up to •1 Zll.
Hlda·a·bedo.t310. and up
to *'80., oota bedo 11411,
Rocllnero. USI. to 1371 ..
I.Aompo from US. to *1211.
pc. dloetteo
to
4311.
7 pc. from
*11911011
and ..up.
Wood table with olx choiro
12S6 to 1746. Deok *11 0
up to U26. Hutchoo, 16110.
Bunk i!"d complete with
mottr•-•· 12711. ondupto

oreo. Coli K.,neth 'l woln
114·211·111.2 ivenlngo.
Cheohlro, 3 ben., 2 bellli,
FR. etove. ref., DW. EH. CA.
Dop. I rof. Nq . Coli 803·
781 ·7195 or 114· 317·
7117.
.
3 bdr. hot,~ .. in town whh
carport, private lOcation,

1275 mo. CoU 448-B293
ohor IPM .
2 bedroom hou11, fully
carpeted. t200 por mo. pluo ""'"'"'r..utllltlu Dopo'lit I reterencao. North of ·Choohire on
old lit. 7, 448 -97SI
8 :30AM to 4:00PM .
2 bdr. fuel oil at ova. chicken
hou•.

garden 1r11,

Will

accept 2 children. $176
mo., $100 damogil dapoait.
Mercerville eroo . Coli 304626-0722 aftor 4:30pm.
3 bdr. hou• in cou"try.
plus
dep, no 1226
pets. Call
Naor MC
Rio. Grenda,
mo.

., 4 -246·6439 .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Open Hou1e Sun. Dec. 2

1 :00-6:QOPM . Purpooe-for
rent- 3 b•droom home wi1h
many extras. Low utilities,
ektru nice . location: 832
Gavin Drive. Rodney Village
II, Golllpolia. Call 614-_
2 86-

Two bedroom furnished
trailer in Chaster area .

6447 lor detello end private

and reference• required . Call

appointment . $300
month &amp; deposit.

per

Modern bi-level for sa'le or

rent, 3 bdr., 2 both, lg .

•186 .00 monthly, deposit
814-992 ·3237.
2 bedroom, ~ mila out Sand

Hill lload. 304-876-3834.

livingroom w-dining area,
stove, refrig .• finished base·
ment, carpeting throughout,
2 car attached garage. patio.
deck, 1 acre. 4 mi. out Rt.
218, t300 plus utilities! aec .
dep . &amp;. ref. Cell446-7044or

12x86 mobile home wjth
tip-out, 2 bedrooms. furnished with washer and
dryer, 8200 plua utilities,
water and garbage fur-

448-8080.

~obile home in Gallipolis,

2 bdr house with ref. Call

814-266-6068 .
6 rm. hou1e for rent, 10 min .
from town, Clay SchoOl dist .

Coli 446-2706.
3 bdr. home in Gallippllo, no
pets. ref. required. Call
441-794S after !PM.

niohod, 304-876-6061 . .
n•ca for senior citizens or
married couple with one
child, no peta. dePosit and
references required. K
k

a.

Mobile Homos, Inc .. 304676-3000.

Apartment
for Rent

bdr, 1 full both, lg. !urn.
kitchen. located in Middleport. Send resume to Daily
Sentinel. P.O . Box 729-V,

Pomeroy, Oh 46789 .
2 bedroom duplex houl8,
downtown Pomeroy. Furn.
or unfurn . $226 .00 plus

utilitioo. Coll61 4 -992-238.1
day or814 ·992-8723 night.
Hom&amp; for rent on Vine St. in
Racine. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
large lot for garden. Call

614-992-2758 or 614-9854231 .
2 br house in Henderson

8185. per month plus $100
deposit. 304-675-1118 .
2406 Mt. Vernon, 3 bedroom duplex. full basement.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal

for Rent
Two bdr .. new wall to wall
carpet, gas furnance, air
cond.. in Gallipolis. Call

446-1409.

bile Homo Pork . Coli 446·
1602.
Furnished 2 bdr. mobile
home OnRt. 7 , no inside

pets. Call 614-245-5818 .

513 Third Avo. two· 1 bdr.
opts, Starting 8136 to S166
mo. Water included, dep req .

Call 446-4222 batwean 9 6
5.
Downstairs, 2 rooms &amp;
bath, furniShed. clean, no
pets, adults only. Dep &amp; Ref.
Nicely furnished modern
mobile home in city., 1 or 2

1 bdr apt..

2 bdr apt .,

Furnished apt. , next door to
Library. one profeaaional

adult only. Call 446-0338 .

875 -2651 .
Furnished one bedroom apt.
Professional adult only. no

pall, coli 304-676-3788.

3762.
Furnished Rooms

For rlint Sleeping Rooms
and light hOuse keeping
rooms. Perk Central Hotel.

Coil 61 4-446·0766 .
Furnished room; 8126 . Utilities, range, ref. Share bath .

Men only. 919 Sec .. Golllpo·
lis. 446-4416 ahar 8 p.m.

a.

46

FOI' oole: 30 gal. elec1rlc
I
water hootor, leu then i
yoor old. Half price. Coli
114·9411 ·21711.
Soooonod hardwood tor
_ lo. UII.OO pickup. U houl.
11
_P_h_o_n•_._e_14_·_7_4_2_·3.,.0_4_&amp;_.__
Firewood, UO.OO pick· up
loed, 130.00 delivered ~
304-875 -2991 or 8761712. ·
1----------"'T---------~
(Cool Delivered! good lump
houoe cool 1 to 7 ton. caH
Jim
I.Aonler 878· 73117 or .66
Pets for Sale
71
Autos for Ssle
Used Furniture - - head 304-878-1247.
boardo, end 2 bedroom
suites. 3 'miles out Bulavllle
Jocketo
lid . Open 9om to 6pm, Mon. SUIIPLUI·DENIM
121 .00, cemollflage ornly Judy Taylor Grooming. Coli TOP CASH pold for '80
thru Sot.
model end newer uled cars.
c h lldrens 1 ulta - heavy 814-381-7220.
II 14·448-0322
Smith Bulck-Pontloc, 1911
jocketo, lnoulated coverollo
Eoetirn Ave, Galllpollo. Coli
121.110.
Sem
Somerville'•·
SWAIN
Drogonwynd
Cattery
Kon·
614-448-2282.
EAST
Ravonowood-ONLY
AUCTION &amp;. FURNITURE
nel. CFA Hlmoloyon, Parolon 1 - - - - - -- - - 82 Olivo St., Galli polio. New Fri. Sat, ·Sun 1 :00-7:00 PM. ond
SlamoH k!ttono. AKC 77 P~tiec Grand Prix 301.'
(other
doyo
oher
11:30
pmi.
&amp; uHd wood-coalltoveo, 6
Chow puppioo. Coli e1 4 - good condition. Call ahor
pc wood LR ouito *399,
&amp;PM, 441-0137.
'
bunk bode e199, antron Cord-pool toble (bumper 448-3844 otter 7.
pooljl200.
304-875-1390.
recliners t99, used bedroom
Pit Bull pupa, rod-red noM, 1 1973 Volkswogon Boetlo
suites, ranges. wringer
female, 3 main. Coli 448- extra ohorp. now droo, bit·
Two
Peavey
Column
Speakwoohoro, 6 ohoes. Call614·
tory 6 point. 44.000 ec:tual
oro and Poovey 8 chonnel 4043.
448-3169.
mlloo *1,800. Call 448mixing boord. •1 .000. or
beet offer. Cell Dobbie. CHRISTMAS Puppies, AKC 4482.
304-8711-151 B.
reglltered Cocker Spaniel, - - - - - - - - - _buff In color, UOO. Termo 1918 Buick Grond Sport
63
Antiques
Stereo conoole with AM·FM ovolloblo for good homeo. Collfornla 3110 outo, 4 now
ster.o n1dlo and 8 track Excellent Chrlllmoo gift. tlreo. rally wh11l1. now
Call 814·3B8-87115 otter muffler, toll pipe, now bot·
8ft. Deacon 's Bench: small ployor,llko 'new. Phono304· 7PM.
tory, runo greet. looko good,
''Gallipolis. Ohio'' stove; 8711-13911 .
8400
firm . Cell 441-4412 .
walnut cupboard, phone
Pool
table,
8121&gt;.
phone
·
AKC
regittered
German
814-246-944B.
814-246-944B .
Shephard ·pupo. f7.11.00 . 1880 VW Rabbit, auto,
f2,896 . Coli 814·388Coiii14-B811-3849.
o-na
Corning
fiberglas
64 Misc. Merchandise intulation blown in aniCs. Parakeet&amp; and cage1, 304- 9191 or 814· 388-e842.
1000 square feet, olxlncheo, 178-11030 oftl( 1:00 PM 1877 VW Dooher etatlon,
outo, •1.1198. Coli 814$300. Froo Eotimotoo, 304- andWHkends.
·
Knauff Firewood Split- 96% 676-3982.
388-9898 or 814-38B·
.
hardwoods . Seasoned or
10
gallono
Ill up, U4.00: 8142,
green. You pick uP or we ExerciH builder with 12 10
tonk, •7.89;
deliver. HEAP vender. 614· pl1t11. lift arm. equat rack.
floh, *3.99;
258-8245.
Uko now 876 . 304-676.10&amp;1.
Limeatone. Sand, Gravel.
Pick up at llichardo 6 Son. One complete oet of kitchen
Cell 448-77SII.
cabinets UHd with built in
1978 Plymouth Fury auto.,
ltove and oven. One fiber·
Plastic chnerns state ap- glass 8ft truck topper. One 67
oir, PS. PB, radio, oporetlre,
Musical
proved. plaotic oeptlc tonka, lit of Mag wheolo for '78
8999 . John'o Auto Soloo,
Instruments
plastic culvert. metal . cul - Datoun 280 Z. Phone 304Buloville Rd. 446 -4782 .
verto, RON EVANS ENTER· 675·2072.
Gallipolis. Oh.
PIIISES. Jackson, Oh 814286-6930 .
Juot in time for Chrlltmeol
Bumper pool table, like new, ·B.
e outlful Lowrey Svm· 1986 Muotong good cond,
304-876-4128. '
phonic Cl1otlon Theatre. If 82,00() firm. Call814-268·
Firewood cut up slabs. 816
7 4_._ _ __ _ _ __
you'rolooklngforopronlium _&amp;_6_
~U load. Larger loada deli'Re.m ington 11 00 automatic
vered. Coli lor prices, 614- 3 inch magnum, 304 -676- orgen It an tconomv price, 1
245-6804 .
then look
otthlo one before ~~1:9~~7~8::;.M,~o~nte
Carlo power
8809.
power wlndowt, 1ir
yo u bul 1349"v. 00 ' c 111
AM-FM rodlo, tilt
Top Soil end fill dirt and Gao hooting otovo 160. 814-88 -73114 ovonlngo. . wheel and cruloo control,
landocaping. Call 614-266- Couch 840. Moytog dryer
For oole: uoed 5 Ft. Baby &amp;8,000 mileo. very good
1427.
working con d. for parts *1 0. Grond Plano, UOO.OO. In condition. Coli 448-4023.

Submer1ibte water purrip

R e posae•alon · Kimb111
Swinger Organ, like n-,

79,000 mlleo, t 1 .300. Coli
448-4073.

Nice trailer space on Rt. 7,

lent condition, 8100. Also
wedding boUquet and 2
bouteneero. 816. Call 4484361 or 448 -4306 or 448·
1171 .

noot town. Call 814-367·
0232 or 448 -4286 .

Will cut and deliver fire-

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
614-992-7479 .
2nd . floor office space for
rent. Court St ., Pomeroy.

Tlvern v.oted out Equipment for Ale. 4 ft .. by
8ft. electric sign, boothe.
table, chairs, bars, bar
atoola, hot dog machine.
st~am table, electric grill
weth hood vent, electric cash
register, 60 case coo.ler. Call

614-268 -8413.

Merchandi se

Rom. model 31 20 go .
pump, 7MM deer riffle with
ammo. 22 pump, aome

51 Household Goods

kniveo. Call 446·3449.
6ft . B in. Meyer snow plow

8293 after 5PM .

horizontal and vertical hyapt.,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

large LR and 8R all new

Washers. dryers. refrigerators, ranges. Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Rd .
beside Stoi"Je Crest Motel.

Call 446-3617.

Furnished

Coli 446-4940 after 5 .
apt •• 2 bdr ..
8235, utllltiu pd., 701 4th,

Gallipolio. Cell 448·44 16

614-448-7398 .

65 gal aquarium complete

llghto, hood, over back mo·
tor. heater, gravel. 111 orne-

menlo&amp;. otand, 81 60 orteke

County Appliance, Inc .
Good used appliances and

TV soto. Open BAM to 8PM .
Man thru Sot. 446-1699.
627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis,
OH.

after 7pm.
Trailer for rent . Call 446-

droullc operation. Cell 4489888 .

Trade Center Kanauga
Ohio. Furniture outlet, WhY

K Mobile Homea. Lot 13,

Mercerville. Call 614-2661552 alter 5:30PM .

Bachelor ap1. for rent, large
fireplace. ref. req ., $226

living room suit a. atudio
couch. See at 646 Second

spread ond bench, f375 .
Coll614,882-7164.

Holly Parkwather·dryer. ret.

mo. 164 First Ave ., Gallipolio . Coli 446· 1815 or 4481243.

Mobile Home. 2 bedroom,

fumiohed . Cell446-1232.
12~e70

Furnished efficiency apt,
private bath and entrance,
suitable for one parson . Call

Ge~

a.ir

rang'e,

fully

oquopped . Call '448-9409 .

Small antiqu&amp; olk buffet.

446-1232 . .

Call 446-3243.

3 rooms with priavte bath,
111. floor: Coli 446-2215.

Pickens used furniture. 304-

livlngroom expando,

$200 mo., plus $100 dop·
oait, 314 3rd St. Kanauga .

Coli 446-74 73.
Three bedroom, furnished or
unfurnished, total electric .
Good.clean condition. One
child .no pets . At New

Haven. Call304-882-2486 .
Very clean, 12x60 mobile
home. Partially furnished.
Rur•l location . Privlcy.
Prefer working couple. No

children .

•176 .00

par

month and depo1it. · Call

61 4-1192 ·6834 .

675-8483 or 876-1460.

3 rm. apt. at 84 GroiN' St.,
8220 mo .. ell utilities poid.
Coli 446-0847 .

fliCK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Uoed IIOVOI

Riverside Apt.. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citinna . 8130 . Equal Hous-

Phone 304-773-6430.

~~2 :~/f1ortunltleo . 614 ·

For sale • New and used
furniture, uted living room
auita $300, swivel rocking
choi~

Furnished 2 bedroom apartment in Racine for rent.

•126 .00 por month pluo
•5o.oo dopoolt. You pay

836, now PVC pipe,

furmtura,

chaira,

couch,

loveoeot, end tobloo. Call
614-4411·9280 weakdoyo
after 6 p.m. lot. I Sun. 9-9.

own utilities. No more th•n

Two bedroom Mobile homo
In Syrocuoa. *1 70.00 Month
pluo utll.! lll end doposlt.
Coli 81 4-992· 7880.

2 children . Call 614-949 2887.
In Middleport. 2 bedroom
apartment . 1
child . Coli 1 -304:882 ·
2681.

66 Building Supplies

Hitachi ltereo radio record

player 8 trock: goo logo; otrlp
couch: between 4 :00 and
7:00PM . 304-8715-8289. ·

AIIPio•· buohel, 85.00:

fruita. vogotobln, produce,

condy and null. Jock'• Fruit
Morket , Routo 36,
Henderoon.
. ,IIIII

Building M1terial1
Block, brick, eaw.er pipes.
windowt. lin1ala, ate .

Claude Wlntero, Rio Gronde,
0 . Coli 614· 246-61 21 .
Rough Cut Lumber. oak,

poplar, end pine. 2x4'o,
2x8'o, 1x8'o, 1x8'o. Ao·
oorted lengtho. Call Hogg
and

Zuapan

Mllteriala

Co.,lnc . 773 - 6664 ,
daytime.

King siu water bed. like
new, would make nice
Chriatmea present . Cell

448-2602 or 814-246 5004 after &amp;PM.

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNElS
Boarding all breedo. Heeled
Indoor-outdoor facllltloa .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Col 81 4·44877911.

--~------ lc -

Oelf, furniture, teblas,chaira.
cupboerda, pie Nfe, tela phonal. desk. also antiqun
and glasawara. Open Sun -

doyo.

Conkol' o Tuppero-

pt.ina, At. 7.

Brlorpotch Kennell Profoo·
lionel All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor bolrdinl tocilltleo. Entlloh Cocker po·
nlel puppioo. Call 814-388·
9790.
.

Comp~~rt f..---------.J.,;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::;;~

and ref!igaratora.
our pncas, 11ve today.

c\

61

,naw furnoco. •17&amp;.00 pluo
dapolit and utllltieo. C~ll
114-187-3484.
.

Ill

Furnlohed 2 bid room opt. in
Middleport. Adulto, no peto,
Hcurlty dopoolt . Coli 614982· 3874.
.

2 bedroom troller fOI' rent.
Portiolly lumlo"-'1. • 100.00
do,poolt . • 110.00 per
month. You IM'Yutllltleo. 811 One and two bedrOom•.
at 40818 Klngobury Rood, fumiohed oportmonto. Coli
Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli 814· 814· 882 -11434,814-992·
8914 or 304·882·21118.
982-2448.

Eorly American Couch and
Choir, Windmill ponem, exc
oond, f1715 .00. 304-871·
2183.

_I Vl'\ll•t.k

Farm Equipment

1978-1 38-Mooolo Forguoon
good ohopo, new dlok, buoh
hog &amp; plow. Priced 86800.
Coli 246-9101 .

Now ideo 323 corn picker
U ,250 .00 . Sldoro Equipmont. 304-178-1!421.

62

Wanted to Buy

Front end loodor · to lit 1
Forman "M" troctor. Jameo
I.Aongdon, phone 304-8714287.

Cor do~•

good cond . •

19B4 Plymouth Relionl
3,800 mi. $7,600. Saara
wood &amp; coat stove with new
2 spd. blo-. '2211. coli
448-0499 or 4411-7816 of·
ter &amp;PM.
1977 Monte Carlo 11 :200,
305 engine. B9.8B1 rnlleo.
Coli 814-2118·12311.
1978 Ford pickup . Now
point, duel tonka. A-1 Condl·
tlon . 12200. 00 . 1974
Dodge

window

8700.00. CoH 614·9923194.
'81 Oldo Cutl111 Supremo,
exc:. cond. Mull Mil. 304678-24811.
19711 Monte Carlo 306,
automatic, PS, PB, TW,
AM-FM caa•n• recorder,
niow llreo, 46,000mlei. Sell
or trade, 13200. 304-176·
4181 .
1978 Muotong, good run,
now tireo, 1760.00. 304·
876-1618.
1984Chevetto, AC, AM-FM
rodlo, 4 lpold, otlll under
warranty. 304· 875-2883
ahor II PM.
'79 Plymouth Duotor, 304·
678·3763.

1--------72

'82 C-10 Chevy Pick-up,
8.21 engine, AC, P8: PS, tilt
whMI, om-fm radio, IUIO,
overdrive trane .• 4 new tirea,
111900. Call 2411·11870.

lent
8ough1oondltlon.
now In 1 982.
11191.00.
ExcoiCall 814 - 992 - 73154
oveningo.
,

Hey &amp; Orein

Ill Y1m1ho 200-4 whooler
wtth · onow plow, helmet
blode. Now, moving owai:
, 188II.OO. Call
_
•
814 81
8112.

71

Auto Pertl
&amp; Acce110ri11

Autos for Sale

1172 OPII2dr., •1315, rune.
Coli 448-7372.

a ())

ren ,

(]) PKA Full Contect
Karate: u.s. Light Middleweight Chemplonohlp Cover-

8.7 Oklo DleMI . ontlna.
22.000 mllao. 81110.00 Call
I 14-H2·73114 ownlnp.

JCJ!n lhe Jum ble lo-~n F1n Club tnd receiR 1b e lattl ·• ord Super Jwmb ..l '""~
mcm!h. FOf liM utnplee writ• to: Ju mblelow.rs t:en Club, clo lhlt ntWiptl,.l,
P.O. 8 01 801 , P11rn y11, N .J . OIOII S.

.

Mark coun sel the members
hood when a young Viet·
namese girl arrives to join
her Amer ican father after
15 years. (60 min.)

(]) MOVIE: ' Glitter Dome'
(CCI
CIJ MOVIE: 'Southam
Comfort'
Cil Flipper
Cil NBA Bukatbsll: Booton

Aogera Baeemen t
Waterprooflqg .

AN NIE

Pla1terlng &amp; Plaster repair.

lreo oetlmetu. Call 114256·1182.

TAFFY SAID TO
TH16 BELL IF "' "'~""
AHYTHINq 1 Mfl.

D.and M . Contractors. Re·

modeling, vinyl oldlng; pointlng(indoor end outdoor!.
replacement wlndowo. Coli
304:773·11131.

.• BE HARC' TO EXPLAIN DIDJ
WHY AReliL !!6T11Te 5TAATLE

OEAL!

IMN WOULD HAVE

YOU, Mfl.

OOE IN HIS ••

DEAL?
SORRY-

at Houston

()) Ill III Fall Guy Colt,
1

Howie and Jody are forced
to p8rti cipate in the Baja

1000 off-road race by a
shady movie producer and
find themselves battling

mobsters . (60 min.j
CJ CIJ IDChorlesin Chard•

liON'S Televiolon Service.
8-lollzlng In Zenith ond

Charles is called in to f ix
Douglas'
broken
heah
when he falls in love w ith

Motoroll. Quazar. 1nd

houoe, cello. Coli 304-1171·
2398 or 114-448-2464.

an ugly duckling who only
wan ts to be pretty.

Fetty Treo Trimming. otump
romovol . Call 304-8711·
1331 .

CIJ liD Brain (CC) ' Mad-

RINGlES'S SERVICE. ex-

ness.' Ponraits of sch izoph renics and their families
underscore j ust how m.uch
bra in research has uncov·
, ered and what it has yet to

ALL EY OOP

perienced ·carpenter. electrician, maeon, painter. roofIng (including hot tar

I WANT 'IOU 10
KEEP AN EYE ON
THEM, CHUNG! BUT

appllcotlonl 304-676-20BB
or 8711-738S.

accompl ish. 160 min .)

fil MOVIE: 'Three Days of
tho Condo(
8:30 CJ CIJ ID E/R
9 :00 Ill CIJ (!) Facts of Life (CC)
Jo seeks the help of Mrs.

BE CA.R:EFLIL!

llotory or cable tool drUiing .
Molt
oompletod oomo

-II•

dey. Pump uln and Mrvi-

Garrett and the girls when
a problem ari ses at the col·
lege radio station where
she is w orking.

ceo. 304-886-3802.
Building-Remodeling. Concreto. drywoll, electrlc81,
kitchen-bathroom inotallotlon. door-window fromlng.
304-871-2440 .

Cil 700 Club
@ Top Rank Boxing from
Las Vegas, NV Tommy Cor·
dova vs. Rocky Garcia in a
lQ.round
Featherweight

. Plumbing
&amp; Heating

James Jacoby
. •'

Skirting
disaster

Matt seeks Norman 's help
in gerting rid of the ficti ·
ti ous rock band, The Dregs
of Humanity, that's fooled
the town.

EKceveting

Good·1 Excavating, booo-

WIN NIE

10:00 Ill

Call anytime 614-446 41137. Jameo L. Davioon, Jr.

C2J ffi St. Elsewhere

The rumors stan after An nie confesses that the ·fem ale doctor staving at her
apanment is homose)(ual
and a friend of Morrison 's
agrees to a risky oper8tion.

owner.

(60 min .)

'.

Cil MOVIE: 'Raiders of tho
loll Ark' (CCI

J .A .R.Conatruction Co.Au-

C2J MOVIE: 'My Tutor'
CIJ Ill III 'Arthur Hailey's

..

Hotel (CCI Peter bas a brief

,.

romance with a newswoman who saved his life
and a guest of the hotel
buckles under the pressure
of receiving a Man of the
Year award. (60 min.)

BARNEY

Hrvice. Authorized Singer

Service Sharpen

Cil Sea: A Quest for Our
PASS
TH' SKilLET!!

WAIT A
SECONT,
PARSON

TUTTLE--

Fabric Shop ,

Pomeroy. 814-992-2284.

Futu're The Smithsonian Institute's Marine Systems
Laboratory
investi gates
the Caribbean coral reefs
in this documentary. (60
min.l
li]) Newowetch

till Independent News
10:16 (I) MOVIE: 'Orognet'
10:30 Cil My Little Margie
liD International Edition

General Hauling

IIIISoo~

11:00 . . CIJ {§) ClJ . Cll ® Ill
1]]1 Newo
Cil Bill Cosby Show
()) Two Ronnies
liD Why In the World
1111 Benny Hill Show ·
11 :30 IICIJ (!) TonightShow To-

James Boy1 W•ter Service.

Aloo poole filled . Call 8142118 - 1141 or 814-446 1175 01' 814 -448-7911 .
Kon'o Water Service. Weljo,
clotorno, poole filled. Phone
814-317-0123 or614·317·
7741 night or dey.
.
Dump truck for hire will hout
coal, llmootono, etc . 304875-3190.

!:~~~~~~~~~
86
· H.

njght's

..
.,

'TO MAKE
A PHONE
CAl-L.!!

is

How~e

num's in deep trouble after
hia ne1r-fetal car crash
leave• the Ferrari at the
bottom of an abutment and

Mobile Home dooro, win-dowo
•, un~rponnlng end
roof pointing . 304·1711 -

TA!8TATE
.
UPHOLSTERY 8HQP .
11 13 lee. Avo., Galllpolia
114·448-7133or814·448 ·
1BU.
•

guest

Mandel. (60 lnin .l .
CIJ . MOVIE; ' Beyond the
limit'
Cil Beat of Groucho
(J) SportoContor
()) WKRP In Cincinnati
D Cll Magnum P.l. Mag-

IQEMANO
1l-IE RIGHi

T141S IS MY REP011.T ON

Wl-lALES .. W~ALES LIVE
IN TI-lE O'EAN, W!-liCH
IS A 600D Tll1N6 .••

WEST
t J I0 7 2
. Q!OB
t J IO
+ KQ 10 7

..

E AST
. ...

.K 76532
tQ9 5
+ JB63

...

SOUTH
+ A KQ 654

• AH
t AK8

••

Vulnerable : East-West
Dealer: South
South
West Nortb East
2+
Pass

2+

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

s+

~·

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

2+
4 NT
5 NT

6t

"'

.

'

Opening lead: •K

'-------------l

..

the ace and king of diamonds. The . go wrong. The next question follows
last Irick goes lo the opponents, who logicall y - what can we do about it?
a r e forced to play a winner on a In this case, making all our trum ps
winner - West with his· long trump separa tely is the answer. but that · •
and East with his diamond queen.
doesn't work if w~ don't t rump a club
There is a lesson in this deal. We , at Irick two.
can all be fletler declarers if we
/N EWSPAPER .f'NTE RPRISE ASSN )

Root are featured . (60 min.)
9:30 Ill CIJ Cil It's Your Move

SEWING Machirio repairo.

'.

t 76 4 32
+A 9 52

contract , since West must follow to , remember to asK oursetves wnat can

ri cal' The mishaps and mi sadvent ures
of
wildl ife
f ilmmakers Joan and Alan

I'M OFF TO TH'
PRA'IER MEETIN:
Ml~ TUTTLE

• 983

By James Jacoby
, If I tell you to cover up the East
and West hands and plan the play in
six spades. whal happens? or course
you can simply ignore the instruction
and quickly read on to find out the
solution to the problem. Or, bearing
in m ind that something exists beyond
the obvious , you may ponder what
m ight happen to cause six s pades to
go set. If you decide that a 4-0 trump
split is the only danger. you will per ·
haps see what must be done to give ·
yourself a chance for success.
At Irick two you must trump a club 1
with one of your little spades . Now
the spade ace reveals the bad split 'j
Play a ce of hearls and ruff a he art.
Then ruff another club. One more :
hea rt ruff and one more club ruff
enable you to make the small -slam ·

Q CIJ iD MOVIE: 'Deeth
Hunt'
Cil li]) Survival Specials
(CC) 'Lights! Action l AI·

JIM '8 PLUMBING&amp;. HEATING. Rt. 1. Box 31&amp;, Gallipolio. con 814-387-01178.

Electrical
Refrigeration

.9

Jeff's infatuation for Nicole
deepens
and
Blake
launches an investigation
to f ind Amanda 's father.
(60 mtn .)
-

Meansqetting uf!an
Truck's shot, so I have .hour earlier, but I'm
to walk to work!
opening on time!

mtnte; foot••· drivewaye,
11ptic ,tl~s. landlicaping.

,----------------~
NORTH
li·ZI·I4

bout.
·
CIJ Ill III Dyna,ty . !CCI

GASOLIN E ALLEY

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Galllpollo, Ohio
Phone 814·448·388B or
614-448-4417

86

The on!y reall y re1 1able weather " report" TH UN DER

of a family and a neighbor-

Coli colloct 1-114-2370488, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .·

Scinors.

tomorrow)

TI NKLE

8:00 IU CIJ (!) Hi;hway to
Heaven (CC) Jonathan and

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references
furnished . Free eltimetea.

Soloo I

PURITY

Tune

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING

&amp;

ADMIT

1!111 WKIIP in Cincinnati

WI~ ~AT~

Coll614-387-0409 or 614387-7244.

I Jumbles: HEAVY
~nsw er ·

m
e

'5fU!l.D I TAKE

......

gested by the above cartoon

~ A nswers

Yesterday's

from Lake Charles. LA. (90
min .)
Cil And,}' (Orlfflth
()) a CIJ Family Feud
Jeopardy
® Wh..l of Fortune
1]]1 New Name That

60LLY, WHAT

r tJ

1

Now arrange the cirefed lettert to
the surprise answer, u aug-

form

a : [I I I J[ I I II I X)

age
of
this
karate
champion ship is presented

storm windowa. overhang .

84

J

and the bees to your child-

H • S Homolmprovomento
vinyl . 6 aluminum aiding,
roofing, oeomleoo guttero,

BaHmtntl. Footen. Concrete work, Backhoe' t,
Dozer &amp;. Dltcher, Dump
trucks. &amp; Wltlr-gat-seweralectrical lines.

CON F~N'TED WITH

,.

A 1&lt;1-JOTTY P ~OEILEM .

for explaining the birds

Morcum Roofing 6 Spouting. Now lnllllllng rubllor
roolo. 30 yooro oxperlence,
•-lollzlng In built up roof.
Colll14-388-9867.

...

DO WHEN

1!111 Jofforoont
7 :30 IU CIJ il'lc Toe Dough
CIJ Talking .Sex w/ Your
Kldo Hera are tho how-to's

Home
Improvements

tltind, Oh,ll14-742-2803;

I

9NM

-:--:----,-:------

:;:;;::::;::===
I-------......-- I-30~Q:O.
~~
Uphol1tery
78

Tonight
(!) Whlll of Fortune
WhMI of Fortune
Cil liD MocNoii/Lehrer
Nowohour
·

Trucks for Sale

4 yr. old .Qu.ner hora mare
_,.II pony, Bhown In 4 -H,
3 yeoro. Call 814-28eSII22.

Lorge round blloo of hoy.
120 11ch. Call 4411-1012
oftor llpm.

(I) Gomer Pyle
(I) •
III Entertoinment

Koro-Bun hiller, 11.700
btu. 1 883 8hoiotlcemper 20
f1. 304-8115-3833.

Dozer Work by Ted Hanna.
Dltcheo. ponds. roedo, land
cleorlng, ate. Clll Motor Car
8rokero, 446-8692.

·.

CIJ PM Mogozlne

&lt;Il SportoCenter

'74 Mldoo, oolf contolned,
304· 8711-3427.

83

b y - Arnokllnd Bob 1.11

Un.cramblt ttlftl tour J~.
one lener to t ach square, to 'orm
four orlltnory - ds.

CD He,. Corne the Brldeto

Motore.Home8
&amp; Cempera

82

) ~THATICII_IO_CIU.

~ ~ ~~ -

EVENING

'I

81

.

11/28/84

Yen .

F3110 1 ton Ford Truck. 4
opoed tronomlulon,PS,PB.
Excellent condition .
liveatock ·
63
82100.00 . Coli 114-992·
11344.
AQHA ·18B3 blook gelding J---~----11,600. AQHA 1914cheot- ' 73 Dotoun pick up
nut lilly re~~~Vo chomp . 8800.00. 304-773-8027.
Prod'n Gelllo Co. Jr. Folr.
Top · 20 O~lo · Futurity 1974 Chevy pick up with
11 .200. Both colto quality topper, 304-671-11113.
ohow. proo-to. Con 4411·
0183.
74 Motorcycles
II" dapple grey mare, very
gentle. lhown In 4-H . Coli
814-288·8,22 . .
USO Hondo CR 1211.

Kitchen table. 4 chllro,
buffet. SM at 28011 Uncoln
Ave. Phone 304·171·2088.
Refrigerator. oowlng mo ·
china, mloc. Phone 304·
1711-6727.

Sll iplit'

dieeel f1rm tractor. e•tr•

furnished

Trailer in Tupper1 Pl8ina-

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

66

8225 . All con be oeon ot K 6

King . size round b8d, fur
mirror head board, with fur

&amp;. dep. Adulu only. Call
614-387·7743 .

68

·

Gellipolio.

gun in on trade. 19 In Jhlrp
color TV ex. cond. new stand
8 76 or trade for pump gun.
25 in Quazer II color TV ex.
cond . beautiful picture

Pay Morel

Ave. Gallipolio or Coli 4461300,

Va .

· 6 h . bruoh hog, hoovy duty,
Now open tor busineu, $22911 . Coli 814 -2BI M'luntaln State Block, At. 111122.
33, New Hoven. Complete
masonry auppllet, '4 · ·• B" , 1984 Long 380 4-WO trac12" block. Delivery oervico. tor, with front end loader.
Priced IOHII. CoU14-288Phone dey 304·8S2-2222
evening 882-3239.
' 81122.

4226 alter 4PM .
2 bdr. trailer for rent. near

call 304-415.3-11113, 'Don
Ferguoon Muoic, Ceredo, W.

cond, 304-BBZ-27111 after
6:00.
Homolite Super XL S25
timber oew . 304-875-1788.

""-"&lt;MAL-

'. I

Mobile homo lot. $76 water
poid, 4th 6 Nell, Galllpollo.
Call 446·3844 oher 7PM .

OJ( .

including hoot. Call 448·
4807 or 448-2602 .

79

'ftft~Nffi)'il

Vie~ing

W INe;;'(,

7:00 •

*3911.
Boby
1110.
or box··oprlngo,
MottrooHo
full or twin, 168., firm, 88B .
end f78 . Queon 1111, 1196 .
4 dr. cheoto, 142. 6 dr.
chollo, 164· Bod frorneo,
UO.ond U&amp; .. 10 gun· Gun
coblnoto, U60. Goo or
electric rongioo U11i. Baby .
mottre-o, Ulll *311, bed
frlmeo 120. U6. 6 130.
klngfromo e&amp;O. Good HIOC•
lion of bedroom oulteo.
rocken. me tel cebineu.
hoedboerdo U8 &amp;. up to
t6 6 . .................

wood . Call 266·162B.

Television

.!~

I I:&gt;Y .,,

1914

Metal wheel borrol. choln
oow , ·oawlng .maollino,
arondfolher clock and om.
toolo. Coli 114-742-2170

Refrigerator, ltQve, dis·
hweeher. air cond. humldlfer, 32 in. alumn 1torm
door, 32 in. wooden door.
Christmas tree, all good

W~ !±r_.'~YE ,

. The Daily Sentinel-~· , 3

Ohio

*4110.00.
7:30. AM

~~~~~~~~~=~

end tonk, Stoyrlte, 1325.00.
Phone 304-171-6904.

~sPOR'T'S ­

=

,_1.,.24_•.,.11_utl_a._nCI
..· .,..0_11.,.10..;.
' ·--•

Acceuoriea for Wagrier

O H, I ~...
YO U DON'TC:ARE

.Pour

1976 Monte Corio 88,000
mileo 11 ,1100. 11178 Chryler

dep., i195 mo . Call 4462236 or 446 -2681 .

kitchen. new carpet. radeco·
rated throughout, $276 mo .

·drll; 11 .
Qn · Ford
. 140. :IQ4·

~~~laport coil 614·992·

Coli 614-373-0466 .

1 bedroom

Now 1'011 Hole::= ...,j., ·
ll.ll. 1 Ill:·
- . ~~·
··• _ ,
17.11. Orde'r """ luok
Caildy,NIIII. ...._ , Ptult
~ 011nrtyMatiiJ'rhn. '•ROidt.

Power lloRor. hell · price.
304-676-1046 after 8 PM .

.1 bdr. completely furnished .
carpeted, all electric, 458
2nd. Ave., adults. ref. &amp; sec.

Deluxe

Wednncley, November 28, 1984.

Size 9-10 weddinbg dress.
Victorian atyle, low scope
neckline. long train, ••eel-

Pomeroy. large Iota. Call

location in
tqwn · ,25C!,:. mp,f &lt;\Oith '~
fillced bht~ya;d. Coli 446·

MIIC .

Spece for Rent

4 rooms
bath, carpet,
stove . refrigerator. fur nance. adulu only, no pets,
ref . &amp; dop . Call446-1163.

3 bdr. apt ., newly carpeted .

Call 446 -3697 or 446 ·
0157 .

Wanted quiet, responsible
working girl or couple, 2
bedroom epanment, excellent condition, good neigh·
borhood, off-street parking,

required. Coli 446-1519 .

2 bdr. mob;1e home near
HMC no pets, $186 mo.,
water ,included . $50 dep.
12x60 2 bdr. 1 V2 baths. 2 112
m i. from HMC at Evergreen.

and Gallipolis. 614-4488221 .

46

message.·

2 bdr. duplex

Furnished 2 bdr.. clean.
quiet. cable. beautiful river
view, Kanauga . Foster Mo·

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, house1. Pt. Pleaaant

ant. Call 446-2745 or leave

8160-8250. Cell 304-676·
7263 675-5104 or 6755388.

42 Mobile Homes

8280.00 Par. month . Utili·
lias poid. Call 304 -773·
5423.

One bedroom unfurnished
garage apt, phone 304-675-

Farm house, Sand Hill Road,
John Doc Hu11ell. after6 :00

676-2749 .

Two bedroom apartment.

Housing Opportunity! has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting et $163 for one
bedroom and &amp;198 per
month for two bedroom,
with 8 200 deposit located
near Foodlend and Spring
Valley Plaza, pool and TV

adulto only. Call 448-0338.

Small .J bedroom house.
2111 Lincoln Ave. Point
Pleasant, $276.00 month
plus deposit . Phone 304-

In Middleport, now kitchen,
carpeting, wood burner. 3
bedroomo . Call 304-882·
2811 .

reference and deposit, 304·

Hud accepted, 304-675 ·
3030, 9:00 till 4:00.

co!l 304-875-7384 .

~atty ~•rcer.

adult, 8176. plus electric.

houae for rent or 111118 in
Newly remodeled house, 2

people. Call304-773-5882,

Furniahed upStairs duplex. 3
rooms and bath, clean, 1

4 bedroom colonial brick

Pomeroy. Call1-373-0468 .

Nice efficiency apartment:
sui1able for one or two

304-675-1962.

44

HouMhold Ooocl1

.

IF T~E'I LIVED WfiERE
"(()U LIVE, VOUR DAD
WOULDN 1T ~AVE ROOM
· TO PARI( i-llS CAR ..

his baseball cop near tho
body of 1 girl he was hired
to find. (RI (80 min .l
()) UMnlght America
liD Berney Miller

HAHAHAHA!

Ill !JJ

Nlgh~lne

1111 Twilight Zone
12:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Nightmoru'
Cil Burnt • Allen
(J) Mndo SportoLook
Cll Nlghtllne
liD MOVIE: 'You Can't Win
'Em All'
.
•III Ey• on Hollywood
eGunomoke
.
12:30 II Cll ffi Loto Night with
David Lettorman

-- -- - - -

~'l'*"*,r
THOMAS JOSEPH

by
ACROSS
39 More
I Exclusive
.lovable
group
4Q Pupil (Fr. I
6 Hell
41 Hoodwinked
11 Counter· 42 Temptress
tenors
DOWN
12 Originated I Dramalis
13 Initiate
personae
14 Fry
2 Wedding
somewhat
Setting
Yesterday 's Answer
15 Film
3 Betray
HWJter
4 Craggy hill10 Taken
26 Acquiesce
16 Leap,
5 Lover
ca re of
27 Nonsense !
a s a frog
of beauty 17 Unified
3t Distaff
IS Bakery
6 Fastening 20 Oregon city ruff
product
device
21 P ottery
32 Trite
19 Gone above 7 Altar
fragment
humor
constel21 Strip
24 Oregon
34 Debtor's
of pine
lation
city
burden
22 Man's
8 Traitor
25 Service, 36 To a nic~name
38 Asian rive r
9 Sea inlet
men
23 Demigod
Z4 Salllree

. ,,

. , !\

25 " Maude"
co-star

26 Tennis
great
27 Elephant's
cry
211 Check
29 Zeal
31 Cry
audibly
32 Greek
letter
33 Salt (Fr.)
35 Love

."

poetry
muse
37 JapaneseAmerican
DAILY CRVPTOQUOTES - Here's how to work ' .
AXYDLBAAXR
!&amp;LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc. Single letters
&amp;pc!lltrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are ali
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPI'OQUOTE

11·211

'
E~ATA ' K

PAEFAAJ

V

PH C

V

SVTAAT

.

L HRRAT AJS A
VJ L

Q G KE

....
' '

V

QWP :

EFAJEO

ENA
EW

L H.RRATAJ S A
RWT E O

NW G TK

HK
V

FAAB . PATJVTL
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RAmER THAN THE READY TONGUE, - GARIBAlDI
() 1... King f Ntvrn Sy ndlce tt, In(.

.

�•
Pege-14-The Daily Sentinel

·:D eer kills set record
.COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- DesJIIte complaints about unfavorable
weather, hunters bagged a record
'Jiumber or deer In the first day of
Ohio's gun-hunting season.
At least one buhler was reporied
Shot In the opening of hunting
Monday. Manuel Nieto, 30, of East
pinton, was listed In guarded
mndltlon In Tlmken Mercy Hospital
lh Canton after being shot in the
abdomen while hunting with eight
. other people in Stark County.
' The Ohio Department of Natural
'f!esources said a first-day record of
20,845 deer were killed-Monday.
:· TUesday's kill figures would not
&amp;e available until Wednesday, he

. s, aid.
Hunters around the state complained about the good weather
Monday and Tuesday. Bad weather

a .m., Tuppers PlainS was called to
Forked Ru n State Park for P resley
Trumble to Veterans Memorial.
Pomeroy wenttoCounty Road 19at
12: 14 p.m . and transported· Sally
Byers to Veterans Memorial. At
12:33 p.m.. Rutland went to County
Road 45 for $herry Ferguson. She

Three defendants were fined and
ll others forfeited bonds in the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night.
Fined S375 and costs ,each on
charges ofdrlvlngwhile intoxicated
were Charles Rei.t mlre, near Pome·
roy, an~ Douglas Starcher , near
Rutland, and Robert Klein, Pome·
roy, was fined $44 and costs on a
speeding charge. Assessed costs
only after being charged with
assault was Mitchell Sta nley,

was treated but not transported.
Pomeroy responded to a call from

Pomeroy.
Forfeiting bonds were Bruce

driving while Intoxicated charge,
and $00, speeding.

and snow make deer easier to track
and spot, they said. '
But Monday's total kill was more
than 40 percent last year's opening·
day kill of 14,600 deer.
Schiff attributed the record to a
new buck ·doe zone in 24 centra I and
southeast Ohio counties, Hunters
are being allowed to kill the females
to help control a deerpopulatlonthat
ODNR officials say Is growing
beca use of better habitat
management.
The gun-hunting season runs
through Saturday.
Wildlife officials said the top 10
counties and their kills were' as
follows: Muskingum,I.:D!: Athens,
1,1120; Guernsey, 900; .Coshocton .
962; Hani son, 881; Vinton, ffili;
Meigs, 841; Licking, 817; Holmes,
768; and Washington, 755.

the Pomeroy Health Care Center at
1:04 p.m . and transported Martin

~~~~~~~.o~~::~~M!~~ri~a~~

called to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center and transported Freda
Mitch to veterans MemoriaL And a t
7:01 p.m., Tuppers Plains went to
StateRoute681forFloydBarringer
to P leasant Valley Hospital.

Judge issues arrest orders
An order fort he immediatearrest

and Incarceration of Dwain E .
Helton has been Issued by Judge
Charles Knight in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Helton fm1eited a $2500 recognizance bond Wednesday morning
when he failed to appear in Court for
a jury tria l scheduled to begin a t 9
a.m.
Helton was returned to Meigs
County in September from the
Chillicothe Correctional Facili ty
after a request for a new tr ial was
granted by Judge Knight.
Helton had been serving a
sentence of one to three years for
corrupting a minor, a third degree
felony. He began serving sentence
on April 29. 1982 as ordered by then
Common Pleas .Judge J ohn Bacon.
After his sentencing in Meigs
County, He lton filed a notice of
a ppeal but did so in the wrong court.

Weather forecast
Tonight : clearing a nd much
colder , low in the mid-30s. Thurs·
day: sunny with a high 45 to 50. The
chance of rain is 10 percent tonight
and near zero percent Thursday.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday: a chance
of showers or snow Rurries Friday;
a chance of soow Ourries northeast
Saturday; olhetWise fair Saturday
andSunday.Highs In40sFrldayand
In the 30s Saturday and Sunday.
Lows In the 30s Friday, In the
mld-20s to mld·_30s Saturday and In
the upper teens wtd lower 20s ·
Sunday.

I.

Area death

Wanda Mae Stewart

Promotions
.announced
or

Norman R . Hwnphreys
the Joining the Philip-~ Plant in 1978
Pomeroy area, has been promoted . as production superintendent
· toaslstantplantmanagerofCentral maintenance.
Jonestsinarrledandhastwosons.
Operating Company's Philip Sporn
Plant, New Havt.'ll:
,
He Is Sunday School superintendent
Succeeding Hwnphreys aS main- at N~ Haven United Methodist
tenance superintendent at Sporn Is Church and a Webelos den leader In
Gary H. Jones, New Haven.
the Cub Sc~uting program.
Humphreys ·holds a bachelor of .-----------~
sclence'clegree In industrial technology from Ohio University. He has
also attended the American Electric
Power System Management Program at the University of Michigan
Graduate, School or Business Administration. Humphreys began his
utility career In 1971 as a pertorHunter's Check List
manceenglneer
atSpornandduring ,
GBI'Y H • .Jones
' - (hock anti (Joan Guo
1972·73 served as a sli!rt ·upenglneer
""" (ht&lt;k Hvnting Equipment
at Indiana and Michigan Eleetrlc
""" Check Air In Ti111
Company's Donald C. CoOk Nuclear
..., Colt Pomeroy Ft0wer Shop
Plant, Bridgman, Mich. He held
anti ltnd tho DMr Muoter't
Swartwout, Racine, $49; William variollll positions at Sporn before
.,,,,,1 . TO MY
Pickens, Racine, $42; Harold Petit, being promoted to maintenance
•
WIFE
Pomeroy, $46; -Lisa Willis, Bidwell, superintendent In 1!&amp;!.
S45; John Blake, Pomeroy, $49;
Humphreys Is a r:ru:mber of the
DOliN
Harry Davidson, Pomeroy, $58, and American Society of Mechanical
Mary Perry, Davis, w. Va., $45, all Engineers and the Meigs Cou11ty
on speeding charges; Daniel She- · Farm Bureau. He Is married and
pard, Frazeysburg, $63, tratflcllght !las three children.
viola tion; Tina Rosenbaum, PomeJones holds a bacbelor of science
POMEROY
roy, $63, failure to register motor degree in mechanical engineering
FLOWER
SHOP
vehicle; Steven Patterson, Rutland, from the West VIrginia Institute of
' I~·· It"' 1.,.,.,,." ,,.,,.,, I "' ' '
I'll. tn.un
$63, traffic light violation, and Technology. He Was employed by
\ it C•ntl. and Wira
... "'·""
Major
Cred
flowera
Rodney Manley, Pomeroy, $375, General Electric Company and ·

Emergency squads kept busy
, Eleven calls were a nswered on
Tuesday by units of the Meigs
County Emerge1:1cy Medical
Service.
· At3:48 a. m. , Rutland was called
to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Harry
Rambo to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital. At 6:43a.m ., Middleport
went to Bradbury for Wanda Mae
Stewart to Holzer Medical Center .
Middleport was called to the
Stonewood Apartments at6: 52 a .m .
for Evelyn Maines to Veterans
Memoria] Hospita I.
Racine's unit answered a call on
BUnd Hollow Road at 8:52a.m. for
J..,ort Anderson who was transported
to Holzer Medical Center. Middleport went to South F ront Street a t
8: 51 a.m. for Dorothy Young to
Holzer Medical Center. At ll: 20

Wednesday, November 28, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

By the time his mistake was
ascertained. his a ppeal time had run
In his motion for a new trial,
out.
Helt.on wit hdrew his previous plea of
guilty. stating that he was deprived
of his right to counsel and was
coerced into m aking his original
plea . ·
Helton was released on bond from
the custody of Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt on Oct. 3, pending
cou11 action. Helton's counsel in the
matter is Toledo attorney, Diane M.
·
Dappeler.

DEER
HUNTER'S
SPECIAL ·

Norinan R. Humphreys

Mayor ends 14 cases.

ROSES
$2995

•

f~Rl;;sh;;,:E;qu~lp;m:en;.t:'C:o:m~pa:n~y;;,:be;f;o;re;!;;;;;;;;,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..

r;;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;~~~~;;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

CRAND OPENINC

DEC 1 &amp; 2
•

-

Elberfelds

· 1O A M 4 p M
•

••

•

Y ONLY
SALE!

•

Blondena'5 .Antiques &amp; Collectables
S.R . 124, RACINE, OH. 45771

Refreshments, Prizes, Plus A lC)% Discount

~•­

MEN'S

FURNITURE, PRIMITIVES, WICKER, TOYS, ETC.
REG . HOURS: Tues .. Weds. &amp; Fri. 9 to 11 &amp; 12 to 4
Fri. Evening - 5 to 8, Other Times by Appt.

FLANNEL SHIRTS

CALL AFTER 5 P.M. 614 949·2719

I~~;,;;,;;,;~;;~;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;~

A f RIE ND WHEN YOU
NEED A

Big selection of plaid
patterns and solid colors
in Sizes S (14-W.'l); M
(15-15¥2), L(16-16'12), LX
(17-17\12), plus Big and
Talis to Size 20. Long
tails, 2 button-through
pockets. Excellent
Quality.

Veterans Memorial

'

S13.95 Flannels ..................... $10.98
S1 S. 9S Flannels •..•••.••••.•••....•. $11.48
$1 7. 9 S Flannels ••.•••••.••.•••.••.•. $12.8 S
S19. 9S Flannels •••••••••••••••.•.•.. $14.38

FRIEND
WHITE-ETHRIDGE

Saturday bazaar set
.&amp;67·3110

.r~ ·.~tmw ·
SINCE 1858

5th STREET

f

423 6300

125 LEE STREET
!8 0 h1nd POSI Qff,Ct)

BELPRE. OHIO 457'

OOLVILLE . OHIO 4572~

0

LEE ETHRIDGE

Story on Page4

See Family MedlciDe on P~ 11

days 'til
Christmas

Cable TV problems
Story on

New Meigs business
Story, Photos 911 Page 12

•

at y en tine
Government's economic
gauge continues decline

e

Vo1.34, No.161
Copyrighted 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 29. 1984

196 7 100 Economic Activity

168
1v~

WASHI NGTON ( AP)- The governm~nt 's main economic forecasting
gauge decllned 0.7 pert-ent last m 0nth, marking the fi rst time since the
recession year of 1981 that it had dropped in as m any as three out of five
months, the Commerce Department reported today.
Similar series of declines have sometimes preceded recessions - as in
fact happened in 1981 - but Commerce Secretary Ma lcolm Baldrige has
noted that long s trings of falling Indicators have also sometimes been
followed by a m ere slowing rather than a halt in economic growth.
Most private economists believe that Is what is now in store, with the
recent dec lines in the Index of Leading Economic Indicators suggesting a
continuation of the sluggish gro\\1h the economy has shown since summer.
Today's report , a compilation oflO separa te forward-pointing econom ic
measures, showed seven indicators declining in October, lt;!d by a big jump
In jobless America ns' first-time claims for unemployment benefits - a
possible indicator of rising overall unemployment figures before long.
First -time claims rose from a Sept\?mber average of 368,rXXl to 405,000 in
October.
Other negative indicators were the less favorable figures forthespeed of
business deliveries and the declines in contracts and orders for new plants
and equipment, In the average work week, in stock prices, in building
permits and in new orders for consumer goods and materials.
Keeping the index from falling even lower were higher prices for
sensitive raw m aterials a nd increases for the money supply and the net
formation of new businesses.

WASHINGTON lAP ) - William
D. Ruckelshaus. who was the first
head of the Environmental Protection Agency a nd then returned when
It was foundering, is abruptly
leaving again, contending "the ship
called EPA is righted and is now
steering a stead y course."
Severa! Importa nt Dem ocra tic
members of . Congress said they
weren't so sure it is a friendly
departure, citing the simultaneous
departure of Ruckelshaus' top aide
and the prospects of potential EPA
budget cuts by the Reagan
administration .
But Ruckelshaus, inl erv!ewed on
the NBC-TV "Today" show this
morning. sa id his res igna tion was
"very straight -foJWa rd" and had
nothing to do with the agency's
budget. with White House e nviron menta l priorities or wit h any desi re
on his part for another job in the
administration .
Ruckelshaus said "I haven'!
decided what I'm going to do" and
will ponder his fu ture over the next
severa l weeks ."

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP I -The
state budget. taxPs and education
will be prime topics for the
Legislature nex t yE'ar. according to
leaders who assessed the upcoming
session.
Four leaders of the Genera l
Assembly spoke to about 150 people
at a Wednesday conference billed as
a post -election seminar.
House Speaker Vern Riffe lndi·
cated he doesn't get "worked up"
over drawing new voting distric ts.
an Indication that congressional
redistricting might not be a priority
Item before the new Legislature is
seated 1p January .
.
None of the legis Ia live leaders set
any kind of time frame on a
redlstrtctlng bill, a lthough the
Legislature is under court .order to
·redraw ·Ohio's 21 congressional
districts by April 15.
Riffe told the conference that the

The report also revised earlier estimates, now saying that the leading
indica tors rose a slight 0.1 percent in August rather than declining by that
amount and that they rose 0.6 percent rather than 0.4 percent In
September . The index. had declined 1 percent in June a nd 1.8 percent in
July.
The actual index in October rose to 163.8 percent of its 1967 base.
Economists In general have said there could be small increases in the
national unemployment rate in the next few months. But before Ieday's
report, analysts tully expecting It to show a drop were still not talking of
any quick return to the recesslonary pain of 1981-82.
"I don't think we're heading into a recession ," sa id Michael K. Eva ns,
who heads his own economic consulting firm in Washington. Rather. he
said , the leading indicators Index "sort of va lidates the slowdown we're
in."
Robert Ortner, chief economist for the Commerce Department, agreed,
saying, "! don't ·think it's s igna ling recession a t a ll. "
Both men are estimating overall economic growth - as measured by
inflation -adjusted gross national product- a t about an annual ra te of 2
percent in the current October-December quarter . '
·
That would be a bout the same as the sluggish 1.9percent rate of the th ird
quarter and would likely mean little or no Improvement in other important
economic areas such as unemployment.
However, many analysts see stronger growi h after the first of the year ,
especially if interest rates continue to decline, encouraging purchases
Involving credit.

Ea rlier, White House spokesman
Larry Speakes said he expected
Ruckelshaus' successor to be a nnounced " in the next few da ys."
Specula tion on a replacement
began a lmost immediately and
three people were said to be in the
top tier: Henry Diamond, a Washington lawyer and former aide to
NewYorkGov. Nelson Rockefeller; ·
Ann McLaughlin, deputy secretary
of Interior, and Lee Thomas, a
career federal employee who Is the
aS.Ista nt EPA administrator In
charge of the "superfun!l " toxic
waste dump cleanup program.
Two sources , speaking on condi tion t:hey not be identified, said
Thomas was Ruckelshaus' candidate for the job.
Ruckelshaus had been back at the
EPA since May 1983, when he was
summoned by President Reagan to
set about rebuilding morale and
getting staffers back to work amid
unpri'cedented turmoil over the
coni roversial policies of his predecessor, Anne Burford.

1
1""'
1v ••

1-.w

I

1984

--· ..
ECONOMIC INDICATORS - The government's main economic
forecasting gauge decllned 0.7 percent ills( month, marking the !irst
time since the recession year of 198Jthat it. had dropped in as many as
three out of five· months, the Commerce Department reported
Thursday. (AP Laserphoto ).

Mason resident ·critical after wreck
A Ma son, W.Va .. man is listed in
cri tica l condition at Camden Clark
Hospita l in Pa rkersburg and a
Pomeroy woman was trea ted a nd
released at Veterans Memorial
Hospita I followingsepa ra te automobile accidents Wednesday.
Hospita l officials a t Camden
Clark said Mark Compson, 24 ,
Mason , W.Va .. was in the facility's
intensive care unit . The extent of his
injuries was not a vailable.
The Ga!lia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol sa id Compson was
southbound on Orange Twp. 279,
approximately ·one-half mlle south
of Ohio 681 a t 10: 25 p.m. , when he

apparently lost control of his car.
went off the right side of the road .
over a n embankment , struck a tree
and overturned into a creek.
Compson was t.aken to Ca mden
Clark by the Meigs County Emergency Medica l Service.
Veterans Mem orial Hospita l officials said :-Janey K J effe rs. 39.
Pomeroy. was treated for multiple
scrapes and bruises and rel eased . .
Troopers said Jeffers was south·
bound on Meigs Co. 22, when a car
driven by Robert L. Arnold, 37,
Southside, W.Va .. apparently pulled
from a private drive lntoherpath a t
9:15 a.m. ·Nelt her dli ver was cited

Columbia Gas customer, with the same concerns as anyone else
about holding down the cost of nat'ural gas service. I know, first
hand, that the efficiency of this computer network is saving everybody,rnoney. And through the efforts of all its employees, Columbia
is working to hold down costs in every area. Because the more
economically we do our jobs as Columbia employees, the more we
save you and ourselves as Columbia c;:ustomers." .

COWMBIAGAS
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.~...-~

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---

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-~ -----

Dr. John Ridgway has requested
a recount of four voting precincts in
the·Nov. 6 election.
The request hasbeenfUedwiththe
Meigs County Board of Elect!ons for
recounting of votes cast in West
Chester, Ollvedale, Lebanon and
Orange Precincts. The Meigs Board
of Elections wijl pet1orm the
recount on those precincts Monday.
According to the official tally. Dr .
James Conde, a Republican, defeated Dr. Ridgway, 5,093 to4,88Jfor
the position of Meigs County
Coroner In the Nov. 6 election.

following the acc ident. troopers
said .
No in juries were reported following a three-car accident on Ohio 7.
According to tho&gt; pa trol. a car
dri,·en by Lonni e E . NE'al, 33,
Bidwell. was northbound on 7. when
an unknown vehicle apparently

pull ed in to his pat h from Ohio 248.
Troopers said aft er the w hiciE's
collided. Neal conti nued off the l&lt;'ft
side of the road and struck a stopped
car. Thes topped ,·ehicl e was driven
by Lori L. Michael. 18, Syracuse,
troopers sa id. No citations were
issued following- the 1: a; p.m .
incident . according to the p.1trol.

All districts approved new contract
RUCKEI.SHAUS RESIGNS
- William D. Ruckelshaus, who
was the flr.:t to head EPA and
then returned when It was
Oounderlng ha.~ announced his
resignation. No reason was
given for the decision. ( AP
Laserphoto) .

CHARLESTON. W.Va. !API All 18 domestic Uni ted Mine
Workers district!; approved the new
contract tha t took effect Oct. I. a
fi rst in union history . according to
the UMW Journal.
Official tallies from the Septem ber ba lloting were published
Wednesday in the NowmbE'r issue
of the union's monthly magazine ,

indicating that the contract wa s
approved by 83.4 percent of those
voting: 16.6 percent of the m embers hip voted aga inst the cont'ract.
In all. 68.448 UMW members
voted for the cont ract. to 13,583
against.

histot·y a pproved by a majo ri ty of
the members in ewry UMW district
in the United States
The no-concession

agrf&gt;f'm enl

The Journal reported tha t the 1984

was appro, ·ed b!· the members
before the Oct. I expira tion of the
1 ~1 agrecmC'nt. and was thE' fi rst
na tional agreement reached with -

contract was th e fir st in u ni on

ou t a nation wide wa lkout since 1964 .

taxes, major legislative issues next year

state budget is his top priority.
Senate president pro-tem Neal
Zimmers, D-Dayton, said taxes,
education and redistricting head his
list.
Concerning a legislative pay raise
beforeJan.1, " If I had tomakeabet,
I'd say there's gonna be one," said
Riffe, a New Boston Democrat.

StatE' finances, he said, need close
examina tion. Riffe said he wants to
establish a contingency fund if a
budget surplus is found. Republicans, who will have a majority in the
Senate In the new session. are
planning to push for a tax cut .
"On,;e we lookateverythingand if
there is still a surplus," Riff&lt;' sa id ,

" I'd be the fi rst to say that we do
som ething abou t taxes."
"My best guess is that wet Senate
maj ority) will fairly quickly pa ss a
bill that reduces by 10 percent thf'
personal income tax to take effect as
soon as possible," said Sen. Paul E .
Pfeifer , R-Bucyrus. "l think we will
do tha t in the first couple of mc nths

we are in sess ion.
He ques tioned whet her tax legislation will spre ad cuts over three
y&lt;&gt;ars bu t said if it does. he expects
future reductfous to be tied In some
way to tax yields. "just as a
precaution if the economy does not
meet expectations."
Republicans have been critical of

...

TROPHY WINNERS - TtqMea fllrlhe 11M adJ lea In ~rday's
annual Chrlotma!l Parade, ~by lhe Pomeroy aad Mlddleporl
Chambe!'ll of Conuneroe, were awarded Wedne8day llltii'IDg ai the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce olllce. PlcCured, left to rtp.t, Paul
Gerard, parade chalrmall from PouleiO)' dlamber; 111111 Silent Hart,
Pomeroy cliamber llllCI'I!&amp;aey. Aooepdaijf Crephles on behalf of their
respective groupo, Santlf lannareDI for Bend Area Merchants

thC' ~percen t incom e tax increase
passed b)· the Democrat -controlled
Legislaturf' two ~-ca rs ago. They sa~~
the Increase was not necessary .
Republicans told the confprpnce
that educa tion funding wi ll be a
prim·it)'. Mone)· spent on education.
Pfe ifE'r said . " is essent ial to the
fu ture !'f0\\1h of the sta te. "

Guilty plea
entered on
B&amp;Echarge

,

Dr. Ridgway
wants recount
in 4 precincts
"I'm a Columbia Gas engineering technician, working with a computer network that analyzes nearly every part of thousands of miles
of Columbia pipeline. In minutes, I can track and plot the best of
many alternatives and routes for pipeline and load expansion. It
~ves days, even weeks of time-and thousands of doUars. 1see
the_system work every day. I see how it wbrks at home, too. Because in addition to being a Columbia Gas employee, rrri also a

2 Sec;:tions. 16 Pages . 25 Cents
A Multimed ia Inc. Newspaper

Leading Economic Indicators

Redis~ricting,

'

Wanda Mae Stewart, 53, 39760
Bradbury Road, Middleport , died
Wednesday morning at Holzer
Medica l Center follow ing a len(:lhy
illness.
Mrs. Stewart was born Jan. 17,
1931 a t Carey, Ohio, a da ughter of
Guy and Margaret Fife Priddy,
Pomeroy . She was a member of the
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
and a former volunteer worker at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Surviving in addition to her
parents are her husband, Ross
Stewart, Jr .. Middleport : two sons
and daughters-in-law, Michael Ross
and Sharon Stewart, Syracuse;
Steve Leonard and Kelly Leigh
Stewart, Middleport ; two other
sons, Kevin Gene and and Kelly
Dean, both of Middleport; two
daughters and sons-In-law, Marcia
Diane and Pete Hendricks, Rutland,
and Mary Darlene and Rory
Bartrum, Pomeroy: ll grandchild·
ren; four bothers, Da le Priddy,
Gallipolis; Tim Priddy, Pomeroy;
Jack Priddy, California, and James
Prtddy of Rutland; four sisters,
Jeanie Buckley, Mine rsville; Charlotte Newell, Middleport; Marjorie
Rite, Albany, and Brenda Jeffers ,
Middleport.
' Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Friday at the Rutland Freewill
13aptlst Church with the Rev. Paul
Taylor and the Rev. Leland Haley·
officiating. Burtal wW be In Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may call at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home all day
on Thursday. The family w1U be at
'the funeral homefrom2to4and7to9
p.m .

Thyroid problems

EPA chief quits
'

Admissions--Lillian Barbie, Ra·
cine: Robert Snowden, Rutland;
Gladys Golden, Portland; Martin
Mull a han, Pomeroy; Clifford
· Smith, Syracuse.
Discharges--Betty Hupp, Lillian
Napper .
The Ladies Auxlllary ofthe Full
Gospel Lighthouse Church will hold
a Chr istmas Bazaar Saturday at
Kyger Creek Elementary School.
The bazaa r will begin at 10a.m. with
craft it ems and homemade baked
goods being sold .

__... ,

I

TVC cage games

~. be!lt eommerclal entry; Ray Tryall for Meigs VJCA Oub,
best oon-«&lt;IJJDDee'Cial, !lellior division; Laura Green for Syracuse
Brownie Troop 11.00, best nolH!Ommen:lal, Junior division; and Teresa
Sheets Cor Super Strutters Baton Corps, best marching unit. Accepting
lropNesforpwtlclpailonwerel.maHofbnanandSheUaPulllnsoobehalf
of Melp High Marching Band; and Jl!llnlferGrover on behaHofEastent
High Marching Band.

.

Rick Rcc,·&lt;'s. 20. Route i. Pom eroy. has pl&lt;&gt;n d('(t guilt \· before Judge
Charl&lt;'s H. Knight of a charge of
breaking and ent ering.
The offE'nse. conta ined in a bill of
information p r~pared by the office
of Me igs Count_,. Prosecutin g Attorney F red W. Crow. III. alleged that
Reeves had committed a breaking
and entering at Ma rshall Slater's
garage in Sno\\·vil!e Pa rlie r this
month .
A co-defendant in thecase,Joscph
King, 18. Albany. appeared in court
Monday and entered a plea of guilt y
to a iding and abt•tt ing Reeves.
Breaking and entering, a fourth
degree felony. carries a possiblE'
penalty of six. twelve or eighteen
m onths in prison and a fine or up to
$2500.
After accepting Reeves' plea of
guilty , t.he court ordered · that
sentencing be continued pending
completion of a pre-sentence lnvestlgatlon and report. Final sentencing was set for 10 a.m . vn Jan.· 7.
Reeves was released on his own
recognlzancf' until that date.

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